Chasing Gold by Delta Heavy cover art

Chasing Gold

Delta Heavy

30s preview

Key
9A · E minor
BPM
174
Half-time
87
Open Key
2m
Energy
99/100
Pop
31/100
Length
3:38
Released
2024
Genre
Drum N Bass
Loudness
-0.9 dB
Dynamics
10.6 dB
ISRC
GB2LD2410321

Key, BPM and audio features: model-based audio analysis · how we measure · catalogue updated July 2026

Chasing Gold runs 174 BPM in E minor (9A), a drum n bass record. Tonally it lands punchy, neutral in mood. It leans atmospheric over strictly danceable. It is vocal-led. The master is loud and heavily compressed. Hotter than 90% of Delta Heavy's catalogue. In a set it works best as an opener or closing-set piece.

Brightness:
brighter than 89% of Delta Heavy's catalogue
Low end:
more treble-tilted than 83% of Delta Heavy's catalogue
Tempo:
slower than 75% of Delta Heavy's catalogue

Sonic profile

EnergyGrooveMoodOrganicInstr.LiveTempo
Energy99
Mood44Balanced
Groove44
Acoustic2
Instrumental3
Live28
Speech7

Frequency spectrum

amplitude · bass → treble

601252505001k2k4k8k
29%
Low
30-130 Hz
27%
Low-mid
130-570 Hz
25%
Upper-mid
570 Hz-2.5 kHz
20%
High
2.5-11 kHz

FAQ

What key is Chasing Gold in?

Chasing Gold by Delta Heavy is in E minor, or 9A on the Camelot wheel.

What BPM is Chasing Gold?

Chasing Gold runs at 174 BPM.

What mixes well with Chasing Gold?

From 9A it blends harmonically with 10A, 9B, 8A. Moving to 10A lifts the energy a step.

Is Chasing Gold good for peak time?

With energy 99 out of 100 at 174 BPM, it works best as an opener or closing-set piece.

Mixes harmonically

9A8A · 10A · 9B

From 9A, 10A (B minor) lifts the energy a step; 9B (G major) brightens to the relative major; 8A (A minor) cools the energy down a step.

#TrackKey·BPM

Every move from 9A

10ASimple Mix Upper
8ASimple Mix Downer
9BTonal Shift·
10BDiagonal Mix Upper
8BDiagonal Mix Downer
6BCompatible Tone·
11AHigh Energy Boost▲▲▲
7AHigh Energy Drain▼▼▼
12AParallel Key Upper▲▲
6AParallel Key Downer▼▼
4ATritone Jump▲▲
1ARelated Keyrisky

How to mix it

In 9A at 174 BPM: 10A (B minor) — move to 10A to push the floor harder; 9B (G major) — switch to 9B for a mood change without losing the groove; 8A (A minor) — drop to 8A to bring the room down gently.

Pitch range at ±6%: 164-184 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 4A rather than 9A; below -5% it reads as 2A. With key lock on, it stays 9A across the whole range.

Programming: an opener or closing-set piece.

Similar tempo

Within ±3 BPM of 174 — beatmatch without a big tempo pull.

#TrackKey·BPM

More drum n bass

#TrackKey·BPM

More from Delta Heavy

Full profile
#TrackKey·BPM

Other recommendations

Beyond strict key and genre matches: tracks that still sit in beatmatch range of 174 BPM with a compatible energy and groove — candidates for a key jump or a genre crossover.

#TrackKey·BPM

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.