City Life - Pile Driver / Alarms (Movement 2)
Steve Reich, The Steve Reich Ensemble, Brad Lubman
Works 1965-1995
3:53 June 3, 1997
BPM
107
Key
A Minor
Camelot
8A

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City Life - Pile Driver / Alarms (Movement 2) - Steve Reich, The Steve Reich Ensemble, Brad Lubman Information

Acousticness
93%
Danceability
28%
Energy
16%
Instrumentalness
89%
Liveness
46%
Loudness
64%
Speechiness
3%
Valence
3%
Popularity
Loudness
-21.403 dB

Summary

"City Life - Pile Driver / Alarms (Movement 2)" by Steve Reich, The Steve Reich Ensemble, Brad Lubman was released on June 3, 1997. With this song being around four minutes long, at 3:53, 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. This song is part of Works 1965-1995 by Steve Reich. The song's track number on the album is #4 out of 83 tracks. Based on our data, United States was the country where this track was produced or recorded. In terms of popularity, City Life - Pile Driver / Alarms (Movement 2) is currently not that popular. In our opinion, the overall tone is not very danceable and projects negative sounds, such as being sad, depressed, or angry.

City Life - Pile Driver / Alarms (Movement 2) BPM

Since City Life - Pile Driver / Alarms (Movement 2) by Steve Reich, The Steve Reich Ensemble, Brad Lubman has a tempo of 107 beats per a minute, the tempo markings of this song would be Andante (at a walking pace). With City Life - Pile Driver / Alarms (Movement 2) being at 107 BPM, the half-time would be 54 BPM with a double-time of 214 BPM.In addition, we consider the tempo speed to be pretty slow for this song. The time signature for this track is 4/4.

City Life - Pile Driver / Alarms (Movement 2) Key

This song has a musical key of A Minor. Which also means that the camelot key for this song is 8A. So, the perfect camelot match for 8A would be either 8A or 7B. While, a low energy boost can consist of either 8B or 9A. For moderate energy boost, you would use 5A and a high energy boost can either be 10A or 3A. However, if you are looking for a low energy drop, finding a song with a camelot key of 7A would be a great choice. Where 11A would give you a moderate drop, and 6A or 1A would be a high energy drop. Lastly, 11B allows you to change the mood.

Recommendations

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ISRC
USNO19643004
Label
L-M Records/RCA Records

Section: 0.14071869850158691

End: 0.14997577667236328