Sing “Blinding Lights” by The Weeknd in a Lower Key
To sing “Blinding Lights” by The Weeknd — Selena Gomez's ex-boyfriend, from Toronto, Canada — in a lower key, use a semitone transposer: move the track down until it sits in your vocal range, then practise or sing karaoke in comfort.
Why sing “Blinding Lights” in a lower key?
The Weeknd has a one-of-a-kind pop voice, and it is statistically unlikely that your tessitura matches it exactly. If the chorus of “Blinding Lights” pushes you into strain, the fix is not to push harder — it is to move the whole song down into your range. The melody, the lyrics and the tempo stay identical; only the effort disappears.
On this pop track, many voices land around -3 semitones — take it as a starting point, then let your ears decide.
How to change the key of “Blinding Lights” step by step
The workflow is the same in the widget above and in the full KeyPitch Audio Studio, and it works for any pop track:
- Get “Blinding Lights” as a file. MP3, WAV, M4A or even an MP4 video all work — up to 50 MB and 10 minutes.
- Upload it to the KeyPitch Audio Studio. The song loads in seconds and plays right in your browser — nothing to install.
- Move the semitones slider down while the track plays. The key changes in real time: sing along and stop at the exact semitone where every note feels comfortable.
- Download your version. Export “Blinding Lights” in your key and practise or run your karaoke anywhere, even offline.
Tips to find your key faster
- Start from the hardest phrase. Jump straight to the highest (or lowest) line of “Blinding Lights” and test the key there first.
- Move one semitone at a time. Most voices settle within 1–3 semitones of the original key — beyond ±3 the sound can turn unnatural.
- Want a karaoke version? The AI Vocal Remover in the Audio Studio strips the lead vocal from “Blinding Lights”, so you can sing over a clean instrumental — in your key.
More ways to sing “Blinding Lights”
More songs to sing in your key
KeyPitch works with any song — here are more tracks singers transpose every day: