Songs / A Major · 155 BPM
Dire Wolf (2013 Remaster) by Grateful Dead
Dire Wolf (2013 Remaster) by Grateful Dead is in the key of A Major and runs at 155 BPM (or 77 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 Dire Wolf (2013 Remaster)
On the Camelot wheel, Dire Wolf (2013 Remaster) 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 Dire Wolf (2013 Remaster)
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.
- Black Peter (2013 Remaster) — Grateful Dead
- SeveNate — Nathan East
- Alabama Getaway (2013 Remaster) — Grateful Dead
- Nonstop — Drake
- Love's Holiday (feat. Philip Bailey) — Nathan East
- Runaway — Sebastián Yatra
- It's A Good Life — Eric Bibb
- Big Boss Man (Live at Fillmore Auditorium, San Francisco, CA 7/3/66) — Grateful Dead
Tracks to mix into it
Other analyzed songs in a compatible key, ready to line up next in a set:
- Alabama Getaway (2013 Remaster) — Grateful Dead
- Cold Rain and Snow (Live at Fillmore Auditorium, San Francisco, CA 7/3/66) — Grateful Dead
- Brown-Eyed Women (Live at Barton Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 5/8/77) — Grateful Dead
- Big Boss Man (Live at Fillmore Auditorium, San Francisco, CA 7/3/66) — Grateful Dead
- Not Fade Away / Goin' down the Road Feeling Bad (Live at Manhattan Center, New York, NY, April 5, 1971) — Grateful Dead
- Scarlet Begonias (2013 Remaster) — Grateful Dead
More songs in A Major
All songs in A Major →All songs at 155 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.
