
Hoe Het Danst - Instrumental
- BPM
- 130
- Open Key
- 5d
- Energy
- 94/100
- Pop
- 12/100
- Length
- 5:18
- Released
- 2019
- Album
- Hoe Het Danst
- Genre
- Trance
- Label
- Universal Music
- Loudness
- -4.4 dB
- ISRC
- NLUM71900172
Key, BPM and audio features: model-based audio analysis · how we measure · catalogue updated July 2026
Other versions
- Hoe Het Danstoriginal12B · 130
- Hoe Het Danst - Sing-A-Long Marco-versieoriginal12B · 130
- Hoe Het Danst - Sing-A-Long Davina-versieoriginal12B · 130
Against the original (12B at 130 BPM), this version holds the same tempo in the same key.
Hoe Het Danst - Instrumental is a peak-time tempo trance track in E major (12B) at 130 BPM. It reads as dark and driving. The mix is almost entirely instrumental. The master is loud and heavily compressed. Darker than 85% of Armin van Buuren's catalogue. For programming, treat it as a peak-time weapon.
- Reach:
- better known than 77% of Armin van Buuren's catalogue
Sonic profile
Frequency spectrum
amplitude · bass → treble
FAQ
What key is Hoe Het Danst - Instrumental in?
Hoe Het Danst - Instrumental by Armin van Buuren is in E major, or 12B on the Camelot wheel.
What BPM is Hoe Het Danst - Instrumental?
Hoe Het Danst - Instrumental runs at 130 BPM, a peak-time tempo track.
What mixes well with Hoe Het Danst - Instrumental?
From 12B it blends harmonically with 1B, 12A, 11B. Moving to 1B lifts the energy a step.
Is Hoe Het Danst - Instrumental good for peak time?
With energy 94 out of 100 at 130 BPM, it works best as a peak-time weapon.
Mixes harmonically
12B → 11B · 1B · 12AFrom 12B, 1B (B major) lifts the energy a step; 12A (D♭ minor) settles into the relative minor; 11B (A major) cools the energy down a step.
How to mix it
In 12B at 130 BPM: 1B (B major) — move to 1B to push the floor harder; 12A (D♭ minor) — switch to 12A for a mood change without losing the groove; 11B (A major) — drop to 11B to bring the room down gently.
Pitch range at ±6%: 122-138 BPM — anything in that window beatmatches without sounding stretched.
Key on the fader: without key lock (Master Tempo on CDJs), above roughly +5% it plays a semitone higher, so treat it as 7B rather than 12B; below -5% it reads as 5B. With key lock on, it stays 12B across the whole range.
Programming: a peak-time weapon — save it for the main stretch (energy 94/100).
Similar tempo
Within ±3 BPM of 130 — beatmatch without a big tempo pull.
More trance
More from Armin van Buuren
Full profileOther recommendations
Beyond strict key and genre matches: tracks that still sit in beatmatch range of 130 BPM with a compatible energy and groove — candidates for a key jump or a genre crossover.
Every insight on this page, for your own library.
Vibes runs this same analysis on the music you own: keys, energy and vibe for every track, organized into sets you can actually play.