Downtown Train - Rod Stewart Information

Acousticness
9%
Danceability
53%
Energy
58%
Instrumentalness
0%
Liveness
12%
Loudness
87%
Speechiness
3%
Valence
27%
Popularity
Loudness
-7.965 dB

Summary

Rod Stewart's 'Downtown Train' came out on November 12, 1996. With this song being about 5 minutes long, at 4:39, "Downtown Train" by Rod Stewart is fairly a long song compared to the average song length. This song does not have an "Explicit" tag, making it safe for all ages. The track order of this song in Rod Stewart's "If We Fall in Love Tonight" album is number 12 out of 15. On top of that, United States appears to be the country where this track was created. In terms of popularity, Downtown Train is currently average in popularity. Although the tone can be danceable to some, this track does projects more of a negative sound rather than a postive one.

Downtown Train BPM

We consider the tempo marking of Downtown Train by Rod Stewart to be Moderato (at a moderate speed) because the track has a tempo of 115 BPM, a half-time of 58BPM, and a double-time of 230 BPM. Based on that, the speed of the song's tempo is moderate. Activities such as, walking, can go well with this song. The time signature for this track is 4/4.

Downtown Train Key

This song has a musical key of B♭ Major. This also means that this song has a camelot key of 6B. So, the perfect camelot match for 6B would be either 6B or 7A. While, 7B can give you a low energy boost. For moderate energy boost, you would use 3B and a high energy boost can either be 8B or 1B. Though, if you want a low energy drop, you should looking for songs with either a camelot key of 6A or 5B will give you a low energy drop, 9B would be a moderate one, and 4B or 11B would be a high energy drop. Lastly, 3A allows you to change the mood.

Recommendations

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ISRC
USWB19600847
Label
L-M Records/RCA Records

Section: 0.1427135467529297

End: 0.146956205368042