Songs / A Major · 183 BPM
Concerto for Clarinet by Stjepan Hauser
Concerto for Clarinet by Stjepan Hauser is in the key of A Major and runs at 183 BPM (or 91 BPM if you count it half-time), a fast, high-energy tempo. Its Camelot code is 11B, which is what you match against when you are mixing it harmonically with another track.
What mixes with Concerto for Clarinet
On the Camelot wheel, Concerto for Clarinet sits at 11B. These keys blend with it without clashing, so tracks in them are safe to beatmatch in or out:
- 12Benergy boost
- 10Benergy drop
- 11Arelative minor
Mixes well with Concerto for Clarinet
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.
- French Suite No. 3 in B Minor, BWV 814: VII. Gigue — Francesco Tristano
- Piano Concerto No. 23 in A Major, K. 488 : Mozart: Piano Concerto No. 23 in A Major, K. 488: II. Andante — Alfred Brendel
- Goldberg Variations, BWV 988: Variation 12 Canone alla Quarta — Glenn Gould
- Harp Concerto in A major : Dittersdorf: Harp Concerto in A major: 3. Rondeau: Allegretto — Marisa Robles
- Etudes-tableaux, Op. 39: No. 9 in D Major (Allegro moderato. Tempo di marcia) — Nikolai Lugansky
Tracks to mix into it
Other analyzed songs in a compatible key, ready to line up next in a set:
- Massenet: Méditation from Thaïs — Nicola Benedetti
- Lascia Ch' io Pianga — Stjepan Hauser
- Rachmaninov 2nd Piano Concerto — Stjepan Hauser
- Piano Concerto in One Movement : Price: Piano Concerto in One Movement: II. Adagio cantabile — Jeneba Kanneh-Mason
- Piano Trio in A Minor, Op. 50 : Tchaikovsky: Piano Trio in A Minor, Op. 50: IIa. Tema con Variazioni: i. Var. 8. Fuga. Allegro moderato — Gidon Kremer
- Piano Trio in A Minor, Op. 50 : Tchaikovsky: Piano Trio in A Minor, Op. 50: IIa. Tema con Variazioni: l. Var. 11. Moderato — Gidon Kremer
More songs in A Major
All songs in A Major →All songs at 183 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.
