Bells in Santa Fe - Halsey Information

Acousticness
61%
Danceability
65%
Energy
49%
Instrumentalness
1%
Liveness
39%
Loudness
86%
Speechiness
3%
Valence
40%
Popularity
Loudness
-8.264 dB

Summary

Halsey made "Bells in Santa Fe" available on August 27, 2021. Bells in Santa Fe is explicit and may not be suitable for children. With the duration being about 3:37, this song is close to the average duration of a typical track. The track order of this song in Halsey's "If I Can’t Have Love, I Want Power" album is number 2 out of 13. On top of that, United States appears to be the country where this track was created. Based on our statistics, Bells in Santa Fe's popularity is average in popularity right now. Even with the track produces more of a neutral energy, it is pretty danceable compared to others.

Bells in Santa Fe BPM

We consider the tempo marking of Bells in Santa Fe by Halsey to be Allegro (fast, quick, and bright) because the track has a tempo of 150 BPM, a half-time of 75BPM, and a double-time of 300 BPM. Based on that, the speed of the song's tempo is fast. Activities such as, jogging or cycling, can go well with this song. The time signature for this track is 4/4.

Bells in Santa Fe Key

This song is in the music key of D Major. This also means that this song has a camelot key of 10B. So, the perfect camelot match for 10B would be either 10B or 11A. While, 11B can give you a low energy boost. For moderate energy boost, you would use 7B and a high energy boost can either be 12B or 5B. Though, if you want a low energy drop, you should looking for songs with either a camelot key of 10A or 9B will give you a low energy drop, 1B would be a moderate one, and 8B or 3B would be a high energy drop. Lastly, 7A allows you to change the mood.

Recommendations

An error has occurred while fetching the recommendations and the harmonic matches for this track. Please try again.

ISRC
USUM72106123
Label
L-M Records/RCA Records

Section: 0.157304048538208

End: 0.17060446739196777