Songs / G Minor · 161 BPM
Coisa, No. 1 by Baden Powell
Coisa, No. 1 by Baden Powell is in the key of G Minor and runs at 161 BPM (or 81 BPM if you count it half-time), a fast, high-energy tempo. Its Camelot code is 6A, which is what you match against when you are mixing it harmonically with another track.
What mixes with Coisa, No. 1
On the Camelot wheel, Coisa, No. 1 sits at 6A. These keys blend with it without clashing, so tracks in them are safe to beatmatch in or out:
- 7Aenergy boost
- 5Aenergy drop
- 6Brelative major
Mixes well with Coisa, No. 1
Real tracks from the database that are both harmonically compatible and close enough in tempo to beatmatch — ±6% on a pitch fader, or half/double time. Same key first, then the nearest energy step on the wheel.
- Blood Like Lemonade — Morcheeba
- Alô Fevereiro — Doris Monteiro
- Toccata & Fugue in D Minor, BWV 565 : J.S. Bach: Toccata & Fugue in D Minor, BWV 565: I. Toccata — Helmut Walcha
- Toccata & Fugue in D Minor, BWV 565 : J.S. Bach: Toccata & Fugue in D Minor, BWV 565: II. Fugue — Helmut Walcha
- Valores — Luan Estilizado
- Morning Love — Carlos Cipa
- Love Can Damage Your Health — Télépopmusik
- Concerto in D Minor: II. Adagio — Miloš Karadaglić
Tracks to mix into it
Other analyzed songs in a compatible key, ready to line up next in a set:
More songs in G Minor
- Cello Concerto in C minor, RV 401 II. Adagio — Kosmos Orchestra / Walter Rinaldi
- Passive — A Perfect Circle
- Tallis: Magnificat (4vv) - 1. Magnificat anima mea Dominum — Peter Phillips & The Tallis Scholars
- Samba de Verão — Doris Monteiro
- House of the Rising Sun — The Ghost of Johnny Cash
- Concerto No. 2 in G Minor, RV 439 "La Notte": VI. Allegro (Arr. for Guitar by Michael Lewin) — Miloš Karadaglić
All songs in G Minor →All songs at 161 BPM →Camelot wheel →
These figures come from analyzing an official 30-second preview of the track with TuneBad’s in-browser engine. Tempo and key are reliable, but a preview is a sample of the full song, so treat them as a strong estimate. For an exact read, analyze the full file yourself — it is free and runs entirely in your browser.
