BPM Tools

Tracks at 110 BPM

Tracks around 110 BPM, sorted into genre buckets with Camelot keys, halftime/doubletime context, and evidence labels. Styles covering this tempo include Tropical House, Midtempo Bass, Industrial Midtempo.

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Tempo reference

110BPM

Use this tempo page to find tracks around 110 BPM, then check Camelot keys before blending.

Halftime55 BPMDoubletime220 BPMTrack sample10 tracks within ±2 BPM
Closest stylesTropical House, Midtempo Bass, Industrial Midtempo

Ranges are practical DJ references. Verify important tracks in your own library before a set.

How to Interpret 110 BPM

110 BPM
Main DJ grid for this page
Use it when loops, cue points, and phrase markers land cleanly.
55 BPM
Halftime feel
Use when the groove feels half as fast but the phrase structure still lines up.
220 BPM
Doubletime feel
Use for faster-feeling percussion or bridges into high-tempo styles.
±2 BPM
DJ tolerance for track examples
Small rounded-BPM differences are normal across analyzers.

Tempo Evidence for 110 BPM

This page shows tracks within a ±2 BPM DJ tolerance so the tempo page remains useful without pretending every example is an exact 110 BPM match.

Track evidence
10 tracks within ±2 BPM
Shown-track spread
108-112 BPM
Median of shown tracks
112 BPM
Matching genres
5 tempo matches
Halftime
55 BPM
Doubletime
220 BPM
Evidence level
10 tracks near 110 BPM

Genres at 110 BPM

Genres whose BPM range covers 110, ranked by closeness to their typical tempo:

Tropical House
100118 BPM · typical 110
typical
Midtempo Bass
100115 BPM · typical 110
typical
Industrial Midtempo
100115 BPM · typical 110
typical
Darksynth
90130 BPM · typical 110
typical
Glitch Hop
100115 BPM · typical 108
+2 BPM

Halftime and Doubletime of 110

Use the halftime/doubletime BPM tool to plan transitions between tempo zones while keeping perceived tempo consistent.

Adjacent BPMs

Browse tracks at neighboring BPMs to plan a set's tempo arc:

Mixing Tips at 110 BPM

Verify the grid

Verify unknown tracks with the BPM tapper before mixing. Software-detected BPM is occasionally off by 2x or 0.5x for halftime-feel tracks.

Match the key

Match keys with the Camelot wheel , at any single BPM, key compatibility is the dominant variable for clean mixes.

Plan tempo moves

When transitioning to a different tempo zone, use the halftime/doubletime calculator or the pitch and tempo calculator.

Zoom out

See the full BPM landscape at the EDM genre chart.

Ben Modigell

Hey, it's Ben Modigell 👋

I've been DJing and producing music as "so I so," focusing on downtempo, minimal, dub house, tech house, and techno. My background in digital marketing, web development, and UX design over the past 6 years helps me create DJ tutorials that are clear, practical, and easy to follow.

DJingMusic ProductionTech HouseMinimal HouseDigital MarketingWeb DevelopmentUX Design

Author and Methodology

Maintained by Ben Modigell

Ben is the founder of Vibes and builds DJ library, preparation, BPM, and harmonic-mixing tools for working DJs.

Last updated:

Data used: 10 reference tracks within ±2 BPM

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Evidence: 10 reference tracks within ±2 BPM of 110, from a 290-track reference dataset.

Source: Audio features sourced from ReccoBeats (https://reccobeats.com); track metadata via Spotify Search API. Spotify deprecated audio-features for new apps in Nov 2024. Manual label reference tracks use Beatport BPM/key metadata where available.

How this page is made: This page is generated from rounded BPM values, reference track metadata, and the Vibes genre taxonomy. Tracks within ±2 BPM are shown first; when that bucket is empty, nearest reference tempo matches are labeled as fallbacks.

BPM pages use rounded tempo values and a ±2 BPM tolerance for track examples. Edge tempos use nearest reference tracks and clearly label them as nearby references.

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Frequently Asked Questions

110 BPM falls within the BPM range of 5 genres in our taxonomy. The closest matches by typical tempo: Tropical House, Midtempo Bass, Industrial Midtempo.
Halftime of 110 BPM is 55 BPM, doubletime is 220 BPM. Halftime feel keeps the same tempo but plays drum patterns at half the rate; doubletime overlays drums at twice the rate. Both are common in hybrid electronic styles.
Camelot keys aren't BPM-specific: any of the 24 Camelot codes can show up at 110 BPM depending on the producer's choice. Use the Camelot wheel to match keys between two tracks at this tempo for harmonic transitions, regardless of genre.
110 BPM is at the typical 110 BPM for Tropical House. The genre's full range spans 100-118 BPM.
Stay in the same key family using the Camelot wheel, mix during breakdowns to mask BPM differences, and use the BPM tapper to verify unknown tracks. For tempo shifts, the half-time and double-time calculator helps plan transitions between BPM zones.