Yellow Shoes
30s preview
- BPM
- 175
- Half-time
- 88
- Open Key
- 3d
- Energy
- 87/100
- Pop
- 19/100
- Length
- 5:46
- Released
- 2011
- Genre
- Drum N Bass
- Loudness
- -5.1 dB
- Dynamics
- 16.3 dB
- ISRC
- GBGPZ1300003
Key, BPM and audio features: model-based audio analysis · how we measure · catalogue updated July 2026
Yellow Shoes: drum n bass, D major (10B), 175 BPM. Tonally it lands punchy, neutral in mood. The mix is almost entirely instrumental. Its spectrum is centred in the low-mids, warm and bass-forward. The master keeps unusual dynamic range for club music (crest 16 dB). A 2011 production that still circulates in sets. Better known than 88% of S.P.Y's catalogue. For programming, treat it as an opener or closing-set piece.
- Low end:
- more treble-tilted than 86% of S.P.Y's catalogue
- Energy:
- calmer than 79% of S.P.Y's catalogue
Sonic profile
Frequency spectrum
amplitude · bass → treble
- 24%
- Low
- 30-130 Hz
- 36%
- Low-mid
- 130-570 Hz
- 23%
- Upper-mid
- 570 Hz-2.5 kHz
- 17%
- High
- 2.5-11 kHz
FAQ
What key is Yellow Shoes in?
Yellow Shoes by S.P.Y is in D major, or 10B on the Camelot wheel.
What BPM is Yellow Shoes?
Yellow Shoes runs at 175 BPM.
What mixes well with Yellow Shoes?
From 10B it blends harmonically with 11B, 10A, 9B. Moving to 11B lifts the energy a step.
Is Yellow Shoes good for peak time?
With energy 87 out of 100 at 175 BPM, it works best as an opener or closing-set piece.
Mixes harmonically
10B → 9B · 11B · 10AFrom 10B, 11B (A major) lifts the energy a step; 10A (B minor) settles into the relative minor; 9B (G major) cools the energy down a step.
How to mix it
In 10B at 175 BPM: 11B (A major) — move to 11B to push the floor harder; 10A (B minor) — switch to 10A for a mood change without losing the groove; 9B (G major) — drop to 9B to bring the room down gently.
Pitch range at ±6%: 164-186 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 5B rather than 10B; below -5% it reads as 3B. With key lock on, it stays 10B across the whole range.
Programming: an opener or closing-set piece.
Similar tempo
Within ±3 BPM of 175 — beatmatch without a big tempo pull.
More drum n bass
More from S.P.Y
Full profileOther recommendations
Beyond strict key and genre matches: tracks that still sit in beatmatch range of 175 BPM with a compatible energy and groove — candidates for a key jump or a genre crossover.
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