Come Sing Me a Happy Song to Prove We Can All Get Along the Lumpy Bumpy Long and Dusty Road
Bert Jansch
Birthday Blues
2:01 January 1, 1969
BPM
72
Key
A Major
Camelot
11B

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Come Sing Me a Happy Song to Prove We Can All Get Along the Lumpy Bumpy Long and Dusty Road - Bert Jansch Information

Acousticness
17%
Danceability
59%
Energy
52%
Instrumentalness
0%
Liveness
9%
Loudness
82%
Speechiness
5%
Valence
88%
Popularity
Loudness
-10.793 dB

Summary

On January 1, 1969, the song "Come Sing Me a Happy Song to Prove We Can All Get Along the Lumpy Bumpy Long and Dusty Road" was released by Bert Jansch. The duration of Come Sing Me a Happy Song to Prove We Can All Get Along the Lumpy Bumpy Long and Dusty Road is about two minutes long, specifically at 2:01. This song does not appear to have any foul language. Come Sing Me a Happy Song to Prove We Can All Get Along the Lumpy Bumpy Long and Dusty Road's duration is considered a little bit shorter than the average duration of a typical track. The song is number 1 out of 12 in Birthday Blues by Bert Jansch. Going off of the ISRC code of this track, we detected that the origin of this track is from United Kingdom. Come Sing Me a Happy Song to Prove We Can All Get Along the Lumpy Bumpy Long and Dusty Road is unknown right now. The overall mood can be danceable to some, especially with it's high amount of postive energy.

Come Sing Me a Happy Song to Prove We Can All Get Along the Lumpy Bumpy Long and Dusty Road BPM

The tempo marking of Come Sing Me a Happy Song to Prove We Can All Get Along the Lumpy Bumpy Long and Dusty Road by Bert Jansch is Adagio (slowly with great expression), since this song has a tempo of 72 BPM. With that information, we can conclude that the song has a slow tempo. The time signature for this track is 4/4.

Come Sing Me a Happy Song to Prove We Can All Get Along the Lumpy Bumpy Long and Dusty Road Key

A Major is the music key of this track. This also means that this song has a camelot key of 11B. So, the perfect camelot match for 11B would be either 11B or 12A. While, 12B can give you a low energy boost. For moderate energy boost, you would use 8B and a high energy boost can either be 1B or 6B. Though, if you want a low energy drop, you should looking for songs with either a camelot key of 11A or 10B will give you a low energy drop, 2B would be a moderate one, and 9B or 4B would be a high energy drop. Lastly, 8A allows you to change the mood.

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ISRC
GBAJE6800200
Label
L-M Records/RCA Records

Section: 0.5217161178588867

End: 0.5271883010864258