Songs / C Major · 113 BPM
Drink In My Hand by Eric Church
Drink In My Hand by Eric Church is in the key of C Major and runs at 113 BPM, a steady dance-floor tempo. Its Camelot code is 8B, which is what you match against when you are mixing it harmonically with another track.
What mixes with Drink In My Hand
On the Camelot wheel, Drink In My Hand sits at 8B. These keys blend with it without clashing, so tracks in them are safe to beatmatch in or out:
- 9Benergy boost
- 7Benergy drop
- 8Arelative minor
Mixes well with Drink In My Hand
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.
- Baby Don't Go — Jim James
- Rinaldo / Act 2 : Handel: Rinaldo / Act 2: "Lascia ch'io pianga" — Bernadette Greevy
- Concerto for 2 Trumpets in C Major, RV 537 (Arr. by R. Leppard): I. Allegro — Wynton Marsalis
- Xerxes, HWV 40, Act I: Largo — Richard Kapp
- Right Where I Belong — Brian Wilson
- Divenire — Ludovico Einaudi
- Phantasiestücke, Op. 88: II. Humoreske. Lebhaft — Gautier Capuçon
- 85mm — Ludovico Einaudi
Tracks to mix into it
Other analyzed songs in a compatible key, ready to line up next in a set:
More songs in C Major
- Bologne de Saint-George: Violin Concerto No. 1 in C Major, Op. 5 No. 1: III. Rondeau — Renaud Capuçon
- Concerto for 2 Trumpets in C Major, RV 537 (Arr. by R. Leppard): I. Allegro — Wynton Marsalis
- Rinaldo / Act 2 : Handel: Rinaldo / Act 2: "Lascia ch'io pianga" — Bernadette Greevy
- Cimarosa: Sonata No. 55 in A Minor (Arr. Ólafsson) — Víkingur Ólafsson
- Mozart: Rondo in F Major, K. 494 — Víkingur Ólafsson
- …And at the Hour of Death — Víkingur Ólafsson
All songs in C Major →All songs at 113 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.
