The Road to Hell, Pts. I & II - Live at Wembley Arena, March 1990; 2019 Remaster
Chris Rea
The Road to Hell (Deluxe Edition, 2019 Remaster)
6:59 April 2, 1989
BPM
152
Key
A Major
Camelot
11B

Embed

Share Link

The Road to Hell, Pts. I & II - Live at Wembley Arena, March 1990; 2019 Remaster - Chris Rea Information

Acousticness
1%
Danceability
42%
Energy
84%
Instrumentalness
16%
Liveness
22%
Loudness
86%
Speechiness
4%
Valence
44%
Popularity
Loudness
-8.24 dB

Summary

Chris Rea made "The Road to Hell, Pts. I & II - Live at Wembley Arena, March 1990; 2019 Remaster" available on April 2, 1989. Since The Road to Hell, Pts. I & II - Live at Wembley Arena, March 1990; 2019 Remaster is still less than 10 minute long, it is still considered a pretty long duration song compared to the average song length. This song does not appear to be explicit due to the lack of the "E" tag. There are a total of 23 in the song's album "The Road to Hell (Deluxe Edition, 2019 Remaster)". In this album, this song's track order is #4. Furthermore, we believe that the track originated from United Kingdom. Based on our statistics, The Road to Hell, Pts. I & II - Live at Wembley Arena, March 1990; 2019 Remaster's popularity is not that popular right now. Since there is more of a neutral sound being played, this makes the track somewhat danceable.

The Road to Hell, Pts. I & II - Live at Wembley Arena, March 1990; 2019 Remaster BPM

With The Road to Hell, Pts. I & II - Live at Wembley Arena, March 1990; 2019 Remaster by Chris Rea having a BPM of 152 with a half-time of 76 BPM and a double-time of 304 BPM, we would consider this track to have a Allegro (fast, quick, and bright) tempo marking. Because of this, we believe that the song has an overall fast tempo. Looking at the BPM of this song, this song might go great with running. The time signature for this track is 4/4.

The Road to Hell, Pts. I & II - Live at Wembley Arena, March 1990; 2019 Remaster Key

A Major is the music key of this track. Or for those who are familiar with the camelot wheel, 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.

Recommendations

TrackArtistKeyEnergyCamelotBPM
Just Like Belgium - Remastered 2003 by Elton JohnJust Like Belgium - Remastered 2003Elton JohnG Major89B144 BPM
The Right Moment by Gerry RaffertyThe Right MomentGerry RaffertyA Minor18A84 BPM
When It Comes To You by Dire StraitsWhen It Comes To YouDire StraitsD Minor67A88 BPM
Lake Placid Blues by Tony Joe WhiteLake Placid BluesTony Joe WhiteA Minor78A147 BPM
Invisible - Single Version by Alison MoyetInvisible - Single VersionAlison MoyetD Major810B97 BPM
The Palace of Versailles by Al StewartThe Palace of VersaillesAl StewartG Major39B147 BPM
A Little Innocence by Cock RobinA Little InnocenceCock RobinA♭ Major54B96 BPM
Guitar Song by TexasGuitar SongTexasC Major78B87 BPM
Roving On by Phil CarmenRoving OnPhil CarmenD Major810B90 BPM
Ain't No Sunshine - Remastered by Paul CarrackAin't No Sunshine - RemasteredPaul CarrackE Major712B92 BPM
ISRC
GBAHS1900398
Label
L-M Records/RCA Records

Section: 0.4645860195159912

End: 0.46884655952453613