Tap any key on the wheel and instantly see every key that mixes with it, in both Camelot codes and real key names, with a plain-English reason for each move. The harmonic mixing chart that actually explains itself.
Inner ring is minor keys (A), outer ring is major keys (B). Tap any key to light up what it mixes with.
The whole point of the wheel: keep your transitions smooth instead of clashing.
Most DJ software and key-detection tools give you a Camelot code like 8A. Find that key on the wheel and tap it.
The keys that light up green are the ones that blend cleanly: one step around the wheel in either direction, or a switch between the inner and outer ring at the same number.
Going up the wheel lifts the energy, going down eases it off, and switching rings changes the mood from dark to bright without changing the energy. The panel spells out each one.
The amber key is a bigger jump up the wheel. It still works harmonically but gives a clear surge, perfect for taking a set up a gear.
The Camelot Wheel is the circle of fifths in disguise. Every one of the 24 keys is given a simple code, a number from 1 to 12 and a letter, A for minor or B for major. Keys that sit next to each other on the wheel share most of their notes, which is exactly why they mix without clashing.
Same number, different letter, is a relative major or minor. 8A is A minor and 8B is C major. They share the same notes, so switching between them keeps the energy steady while flipping the mood between dark and bright. It is the safest mood change you can make.
One step around the wheel is a move of a perfect fifth. That single shared relationship is what makes 8A and 9A, or 8A and 7A, blend so smoothly. Step too far in one jump and the keys start to fight each other, which is the clash you hear when two tracks are simply in the wrong keys together.
It is not a rulebook, it is a safety net. Plenty of great transitions break these rules on purpose for tension or surprise. But when you want a mix to just work, staying inside the highlighted keys is the reliable path, and that is why nearly every DJ keeps a Camelot Wheel within reach.
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It is the practice of mixing tracks whose keys are musically compatible, so the transition sounds smooth instead of clashing. The Camelot Wheel makes it easy by turning every key into a simple code and showing which codes blend.
The number, 1 to 12, is the position on the wheel. The letter is the scale: A for minor on the inner ring, B for major on the outer ring. So 8A is A minor and 8B is its relative, C major.
From any key, you can move one step around the wheel in either direction, or switch between the inner and outer ring at the same number. Those are the moves highlighted in green. The amber key is a bigger energy jump that still works harmonically.
DJ software usually labels tracks in Camelot codes, while producers tend to think in key names like A minor or C major. Showing both means the wheel works however you read keys.
It is the same underlying idea with friendlier labels. The circle of fifths uses key signatures and music theory; the Camelot Wheel renumbers everything 1 to 12 so you can mix in key without reading notation.
Yes, completely. No account and no download. Tap a key and start mixing.