There’s A Guy Works Down The Chip Shop Swears He’s Elvis - Country Version
Kirsty MacColl
Desperate Character
3:47 July 1, 1981
BPM
145
Key
A Major
Camelot
11B

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There’s A Guy Works Down The Chip Shop Swears He’s Elvis - Country Version - Kirsty MacColl Information

Acousticness
65%
Danceability
49%
Energy
75%
Instrumentalness
0%
Liveness
27%
Loudness
86%
Speechiness
4%
Valence
84%
Popularity
Loudness
-8.21 dB

Summary

On July 1, 1981, the song "There’s A Guy Works Down The Chip Shop Swears He’s Elvis - Country Version" was released by Kirsty MacColl. With this song being around four minutes long, at 3:47, the duration of this song is pretty average compared to other songs. This track is safe for children and doesn't appear to contain any foul language, since the "Explicit" tag was not present in this track. The song is number 12 out of 12 in Desperate Character by Kirsty MacColl. Going off of the ISRC code of this track, we detected that the origin of this track is from United Kingdom. Based on our statistics, There’s A Guy Works Down The Chip Shop Swears He’s Elvis - Country Version's popularity is not that popular right now. The overall mood can be danceable to some, especially with it's high amount of postive energy.

There’s A Guy Works Down The Chip Shop Swears He’s Elvis - Country Version BPM

The tempo marking of There’s A Guy Works Down The Chip Shop Swears He’s Elvis - Country Version by Kirsty MacColl is Allegro (fast, quick, and bright), since this song has a tempo of 145 BPM. With that information, we can conclude that the song has a fast tempo. This song can go great with jogging or cycling. The time signature for this track is 4/4.

There’s A Guy Works Down The Chip Shop Swears He’s Elvis - Country Version Key

This song is in the music key of A Major. 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
GBUM71204332
Label
L-M Records/RCA Records

Section: 0.44344210624694824

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