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4[[quoteright:233:[[Music/{{Beyonce}} https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/lot_keychange.png]]]]
5[[caption-width-right:233:''[[Creator/BoBurnham Y'all dumb motherfuckers want a key change?!]]'']]
6%%
7->''"We had joy, we had fun, we had seasons in the sun\
8And the truck changing gears was just music to our ears"\
9"Goodbye papa, it's hard to die\
10Three semitones means singing way too high..."''
11-->-- A conversation on Website/{{Facebook}} parodying "[[Music/JacquesBrel Seasons in the Sun]]"
12
13The Truck Driver's Gear Change is a {{modulation}} near the end of a song, shifting upwards by some relatively small pitch increment -- usually by one semitone (half step) or whole tone (whole step), but occasionally by other intervals. It is so widespread in popular music that the term "modulation" is sometimes considered synonymous with it, despite technically having a broader meaning. It typically occurs after a chorus or as part of a bridge and is followed by a repeat of the chorus and often a FadeOut.
14
15The term Truck Driver's Gear Change was apparently coined by [[https://web.archive.org/web/20140411005838/http://www.gearchange.org/FAQ.html this site]], which compares the technique to a tired, overworked truck driver performing an unartistic, mechanical function. It's becoming something of a DiscreditedTrope these days, although it still shows up with some frequency in certain genres.
16
17The Truck Driver's Gear Change is most often associated with [[PowerBallad uplifting ballads]] and many songs by Music/{{Vocaloid}} producers.
18
19Older tropes include:
20 * Verse (or A-section) in a [[{{Scales}} minor key]], chorus (or B-section) in the relative major key (or vice-versa).
21 * Switching between tonic and dominant for the various parts of the piece (common in music from the 18th century to about 1950, and therefore in earlier, jazz-oriented pop songs)
22
23'''Please note that this is not a trope about {{modulation}} in general''' - that has its own page. This is about "shifting gears" for dramatic effect or to increase the effective vocal range of a song: sliding up a half or whole step and remaining there for the rest of the song.
24
25Compare LastChorusSlowDown.
26
27----
28!Examples:
29[[foldercontrol]]
30
31!!Straight:
32
33[[folder:Advertising]]
34* The jingle from Brazilian soft drink Dolly Guaraná (best known by its version sung by their [[UnintentionalUncannyValley infamous]] mascot Dollynho) has a key change when the first verse is repeated, but then changes to the original key for the rest of the song.
35[[/folder]]
36
37[[folder:Anime]]
38* ''Anime/SailorMoon'': Tuxedo Mask's ImageSong, "Dakishimete Itai", modulates up from E major to F major for the final chorus.
39[[/folder]]
40
41[[folder:Asian Animation]]
42* The theme song for ''Animation/PleasantGoatAndBigBigWolf: Mighty Little Defenders'', "Marching Bravely", pitch-shifts from an E note to an F note.
43[[/folder]]
44
45[[folder:Fan Works]]
46* Delta Brony's [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xqsd5vGmk7s "Magic Duel"]], inspired by [[Recap/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagics3E5MagicDuel the episode of the same name]], modulates up a whole tone for its last melodic cycle.
47* [=SlyphStorm=]'s [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wzb76EFqZkg Pegasus Device]], based on the sequel to the DarkFic ''Fanfic/RainbowFactory'', modulates from F♯ minor to G minor at start of the second bridge.
48[[/folder]]
49
50[[folder:Film]]
51* ''WesternAnimation/{{Coco}}'':
52** The end of Ernesto's version of "Remember Me" modulates up one half-step.
53** The last verse of "Un Poco Loco" modulates up one whole step.
54** The last chorus of "La Llorona" modulates up one whole step.
55** "Proud Corazón" ends a whole note higher from when it started.
56* In ''WesternAnimation/Frozen2013'':
57** "For the First Time in Forever" starts in F major for the first verse, then F♯ major for the second verse. The song then goes into F♯ minor for Elsa's solo, but then modulates up to triumphant G major for Anna's and Elsa's CounterpointDuet.
58** "Love Is an Open Door" begins in D major and goes up a full step for the second verse and chorus.
59** "In Summer" starts in E but goes up to F major halfway through the song, where it stays for the end.
60** The DarkReprise of "For the First Time in Forever" starts out in F♯ major for the first verse, shifts to C minor for Elsa's part, then modulates up to an urgent E major for the final verse.
61* In ''WesternAnimation/TheLionKing1994'':
62** "Circle of Life" starts out in B♭ major and shifts up a minor third into C♯ major at the end.
63** "I Just Can't Wait to Be King" starts in F♯ and shifts into G near the end. In this case, it's not played for emotional effect, but rather to make the song even more jolly and cheerful. The [[WesternAnimation/TheLionKing2019 remake version]] also starts in F♯ and ends in G, but has an extended sequence where it shifts ''down'' to D first, then rather awkwardly transitions back to G.
64** "Can You Feel the Love Tonight?" is in F major and shifts a full step to G in the final few verses.
65*** The [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k_lsDIdvGxs demo version]] starts out in C major and shifts into D major for the last few verses (the first of which can be heard in a trailer for the movie on the 1994 VHS release of ''WesternAnimation/TheFoxAndTheHound'').
66*** The [[WesternAnimation/DisneySingAlongSongs Sing-Along Songs version]] from "Colors Of The Wind" (similar in style to the demo version, but with the lyrics of the Elton John pop version) starts out in B♭ major for the introduction, then shifts to G major for the first verse and chorus, and the rest of the song goes back to B♭ major.
67* ''WesternAnimation/TheLionKingIISimbasPride'':
68** "Upendi" shifts from G major to A major near the end.
69** "Love Will Find a Way" starts in F major, then modulates to A major from Kovu's verse onward.
70* "Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious" from ''Film/MaryPoppins'' starts in B♭ major, moves up a half step to B after the second chorus, and then again to C after the third.
71* [[Film/TheMuppetMovie "The Rainbow Connection"]] modulates up a half-step right before the last verse. "Shiver My Timbers" from Film/MuppetTreasureIsland also goes up a semitone every time the title repeats. Creator/JimHenson loved this effect, and during singalongs and rehearsals would frequently shout "Modulate!", change key and expect everyone to follow him.
72* "Always Look on the Bright Side of Life" from ''Film/MontyPythonsLifeOfBrian'' has one near the end. During the sing-along at Creator/GrahamChapman's funeral, Creator/EricIdle pointed it out.
73* ''WesternAnimation/AnAmericanTail'':
74** The first movie has "Never Say Never", in which the first verse is sung in E♭ major and the second verse in F major. The end credit version of "Somewhere Out There" is sung entirely in C major while the instrumental break plays in A major.
75** The [[WesternAnimation/AnAmericanTailFievelGoesWest second movie]] has "Way Out West" sung in B♭ major for the verses, E♭ major for the choruses, and shifts to F major for the finale. "Dreams to Dream" starts out in C major and ends in G major, whereas the end credit version starts in A major and ends in E major.
76** The [[WesternAnimation/AnAmericanTailTheTreasureOfManhattanIsland third movie]] has "Friends of the Working Mouse" playing in B♭, then to C, and finally to D.
77** And finally, the [[WesternAnimation/AnAmericanTailTheMysteryOfTheNightMonster fourth movie]] has "Who Will" starting out in D major and shifts to E♭ major after the middle eight.
78* In ''WesternAnimation/TheLittleMermaid1989'', "Under the Sea" starts in B♭ major, then goes up a whole tone to C major at the end of the interlude.
79* The song "Run Away" from the ''WesternAnimation/{{Hoodwinked}}'' soundtrack counts. The first verse is played in E♭, but after the first chorus, the song modulates to E major.
80* The Franchise/{{Superman}} March by Music/JohnWilliams (theme song for [[Film/SupermanTheMovie the 1978 movie]]) goes up a half tone on the last repeat of the main motif, just before the coda.
81* The ''Film/SisterAct'' cover of the Isley Brothers hit "Shout" that plays over the credits starts in D major, and then modulates a record-breaking FIVE TIMES, finally ending in G (just in time for Sister Mary Robert's verse).
82* The eponymous song from ''WesternAnimation/BeautyAndTheBeast'': "As the sun will rise...", a signal shifting from C♯ major to E♭ major. The end credit version has the first part of each verse sung respectively in F major and G major, while the second parts and middle eights are sung in D major and E major.
83** "Belle" is played entirely in C, but for Gaston's verse in the song, it shifts down to B♭. As for its reprise, it is played in B.
84** "Be Our Guest" goes from G major to A♭ major to A major to B major and finally to C major.
85** "Kill the Beast" starts in A minor and ends in B♭ minor.
86* "Flying Dreams" from ''WesternAnimation/TheSecretOfNIMH''. The song has a very loose, undefined lyrical structure, so it's roughly: Verse in C, bridge up to B♭, chorus back down to C, instrumental break in C -- and then the second iteration of the bridge modulates a full step ''down'' to B major before finishing in C.
87** The [[WesternAnimation/TheSecretOfNIMH2TimmyToTheRescue sequel]] has these:
88*** "Make the Most of Your Life" has the intro and first verse sung in C major, the second verse in D major, the third in B♭ major, the bridge and middle eight in A♭ major, and the final verse in F major.
89*** "I Will Show the World" starts in B♭ major for the first part of the first verse, then shifts down to A♭ major for the second part of the verse, then back up to B♭ major for the first chorus. Then, it shifts up to C major for the second verse and to D major for the final chorus. The sad reprise of the song is sung in B♭ major, before transitioning into "All I Had is Gone", which is sung entirely in C major.
90*** "Just Say Yes" has a few shifts, it's a little hard to define.
91*** "My Life and My Love" starts in C major and ends in D major.
92* In ''WesternAnimation/{{Moana}}'', the main theme [[https://youtu.be/cPAbx5kgCJo?t=116 "How Far I'll Go"]] shifts up during the climax.
93* Music/OrchestralManoeuvresInTheDark's "If You Leave", from ''Film/PrettyInPink'', shifts up the second verse and chorus (themselves modulated a minor third apart) by a whole tone, drops back to the original chorus key of D for the third chorus, then has a triple gear change finale.
94* The title song of ''Film/NewYorkNewYork'' does a triumphant semitone modulation after the second chorus's dramatically extended bridge. The modulation takes Creator/LizaMinnelli's original soundtrack version from B major to C major--but note that Minnelli actually sings the first chorus in D♭.
95* The main theme of ''Film/TheUmbrellasOfCherbourg'' ups the pitch three times in the [[https://youtu.be/zTpYBaSrhP0?t=2749 finale]].
96* In ''WesternAnimation/TheJungleBook1967'', during "I Wanna Be Like You", the verses are sung in C minor, while the choruses are in E♭ major.
97* ''Anime/MyNeighborTotoro''[='s=] closing TitleThemeTune shifts up from F major to F♯ major for its last chorus.
98* "Mine, Mine, Mine" from ''WesternAnimation/{{Pocahontas}}''. The first verse is in F major, the second verse is in F♯ major, John Smith's verse is in A♭ major, then Radcliffe sings a line in F major before singing the last verse in G major.
99* ''WesternAnimation/Shrek1'': During the DancePartyEnding, the movie version of Music/SmashMouth's cover of "I'm a Believer" is initially performed at F♯ major, a slightly lower pitch than the album/single version's G major key (not to mention the original Music/TheMonkees version). Then, after Shrek and Fiona leave for their honeymoon and Donkey has a turn singing, the song shifts up to its usual pitch à la the album version.
100* ''Film/{{Spaceballs}}'': The InstrumentalThemeTune modulates from A major to B♭ major in its final bridge.
101* ''Animation/PleasantGoatAndBigBigWolfDunkForFuture'': The cover of "Don't Think I'm Just a Little Goat", the ''Pleasant Goat and Big Big Wolf'' theme song, heard at the end of the movie pitch-shifts from an F key to a higher D key.
102[[/folder]]
103
104[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
105* The original ''Series/FamilyFeud'' theme is in G, but the rarely-head ending goes up to A♭. Interestingly, the last few bars of A♭ part are used to introduce Grand Game on ''Series/ThePriceIsRight''.
106* ''Series/GrowingPains''' [[ThemeTuneExtended extended version of]] "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Fi0Q1wW9E0 As Long as We Got Each Other]]" by BJ Thomas and Music/DustySpringfield shifts from C to C♯ halfway through the final chorus. [[https://youtu.be/qhyjYewf0Jw Thomas's original solo version]] also included the gear change but at the beginning of said chorus.
107* The 30-second [[JeopardyThinkingMusic theme]] played during the Final ''Series/{{Jeopardy}}'' round does this halfway through, though it goes up a minor third instead of the more-standard-for-this-trope minor second. The original version and the 1997 remix started in C and ended in E♭. The current theme starts in F and goes to A♭. [[BootstrappedTheme The same melody became the theme song]] for the 1984 version. The song's introduction starts in B, then it goes up to C. The main part goes from F to A♭ to B to D to F to A♭ where it ends. Until 2008, every other {{rearrange|TheSong}}ment used afterwards has kept the key changes. The current version alternates between C and E♭.
108* ''Series/LazyTown'''s [[MemeticMutation memetic]] "We Are Number One" moves up a half-step from F minor to F♯ minor for the final repetition of the chorus. "The Mine Song" modulates a whole step, from B♭ major to C major, near the end of the bridge.
109** The ending song "Bing Bang" starts out in B major and ends in C♯ major.
110* The theme music to a former CBS Sports college-football studio show called ''The NCAA Today'' (the show itself was on for the 1982 and 1983 seasons) was like this when it was used for the billboard of [[Main/ProductPlacementName The Prudential College Football Report]] starting in 1985 with then-newcomer Jim Nantz (it was also like this in the 1986 season); it started as a G as Don Robertson announced the title of the segment and its Prudential sponsorship, and then as the Prudential logo dropped off the screen, and the rounded golden frame used for the billboard moved beyond the screen, there was a few seconds of the A key to end the billboard music.
111%%* Creator/JayWolpert's game show themes frequently had this somewhere.
112* ''Series/SesameStreet'': Janko Nilovic's "[[https://youtu.be/K0jTwW82Ma4?si=_d-2ijYJOGFTFmnP Portrait d'un robot]]", heard during the "Mechanical Technology" film segment, shifts from B♭ major to B major for its last 15 seconds.
113[[/folder]]
114
115[[folder:Music]]
116* Mr. Mister's famous power-pop/arena rock hit, "Kyrie," features one "shifting" a full step up after a break-down following the second chorus.
117* Many songs from Ace of Base include these such as the many cuts of "Hallo Hallo," "The Juvenile," "Unspeakable," "Ordinary Day," and "Beautiful Morning" among others.
118* Music/MichaelBolton's song "How Can We Be Lovers (If We Can't Be Friends)" has two. One near the beginning, and the other near the end.
119* Happens twice in "Give A Little" by Music/{{Hanson}}. It starts in C, moves up to D after the first chorus, and to E after the bridge.
120* [[Music/ChicagoBand Chicago]]'s "Chasin' the Wind" and "Hard Habit to Break" both do this before the final chorus.
121* Very common in GirlGroup songs from The60s, such as [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FmJ1AqtTuyo A Lover's Concerto]] by The Toys and [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zcylDkRw7dg I Hear A Symphony]] by The Supremes, the latter of which has three key changes and the former with an astonishing ''four''. "A Lover's Concerto" gets bonus points for its [[RockMeAmadeus interpolation]] of ClassicalMusic by basing itself on "Minuet in G" by Christian Petznold (often [[MisattributedSong misattributed]] to Music/JohannSebastianBach). Interestingly, "A Lover's Concerto" is never in G major at all, instead modulating four half-steps from C-C♯-D-E♭-E major, and also changes the original's 3/4 waltz tempo to 4/4.
122* Music/BarryManilow often uses this technique, most prominent example being his magnum opus "Mandy".
123* Music/{{ABBA}}:
124** Used the technique in their song "Hasta Manana", supposed to be used for Eurovision. Their manager, Stig Andersson, thought that a good pop song HAD to go up one half tone somewhere near the end. They even wrote a birthday song to him that says "We think you'll like it if we raise the song one half-tone..." in the bridge before raising it one half-tone for the final chorus.
125** There's also a key change in the final chorus from A minor to B♭ minor in "Money, Money, Money".
126* In the musical oeuvre of everyone's favourite Vulcan, Creator/LeonardNimoy, we are treated in his masterwork "The Ballad of Bilbo Baggins" to a shift from C major to C♯ major with neither warning nor reason. The work remains in C♯ major for the remaining two minutes of... experience.
127* In the song "Take My Time" by Junior Senior, it occurs once, ends, then fades back in and shifts up ''again''. Honestly, it's quite exciting.
128* Almost required in Series/EurovisionSongContest entries, to the extent that this trope could be alternatively titled "Eurovision Key Change". It has become more prominent in recent years; in The80s, by contrast, you might find this trope on [[SarcasmMode only]] half the entries. Norway's entry in 1979, "Oliver" by Anita Skorgan, gets bonus points for modulating a full fifth.
129* Also frequently used by every other poppy BoyBand, especially ones from The90s.
130** "I Drive Myself Crazy" by Music/{{NSYNC}} goes up a minor third from A to C for the bridge, then back down mid-sentence before going up a major second to B for the last chorus. Straighter examples include "U Drive Me Crazy" and "This I Promise You".
131** The Music/BackstreetBoys. Full stop. Notable offenders include "I'll Never Break Your Heart", "All I Have to Give", "I Want It That Way", "Show Me the Meaning of Being Lonely", and "Shape of My Heart".
132* Music/TheBeachBoys' "I Get Around" does this. The song begins in the key of G major, then the bridge is played in the key of A, and then the rest of the song is played in A♭ major.
133* Music/AnitaBaker is very fond of this trope. The album "Rhythm Of Love" especially uses this quite liberally.
134* The Mr. T Experience's unbelievably PopPunk "Ba Ba Ba Ba Ba".
135* Another arguably good gear-change occurs in Music/BrianMay's "Driven by You," a shamelessly upbeat rock song kicked up one more notch before it reaches its end.
136* "#1 Crush" by Music/{{Garbage}}, where the pitch change in the middle only makes the song scarier. "Breaking Up the Girl" does this, too. The song is played in the key of A major but shifts to B major for the final chorus.
137* Done several times in the song "The Christmas Shoes", in an attempt to add to the sappy sentiment. This song shifts up by whole tones, starting in G, going to A, and ending in B - although it doesn't shift up by semitones, the gear-change effect is still there. It ends up almost too high for the main singer to sing, so they had to add a children's chorus at the end.
138* The60s song "Love of The Common People" (recorded by lots of people, but never really a hit) has each verse in a different key.
139* "Danke Schoen", made famous by Wayne Newton and now popularly known as the "Film/{{Ferris Bueller|sDayOff}} Parade Song", shifts up a semitone each verse. Because the song has no chorus, it's especially noticeable.
140* Even Stratovarius' "Eagleheart" manages to sneak one of these in! After the last of the lyrics, the intro riff - which is the "Heart of the eagle, he flies through the rainbow..." refrain transcribed to guitar - is played four times, the last two being played on a higher string as the song fades out.
141* Symphony X:
142** Used at the end of "Through the Looking Glass". Given the epic chorus, it arguably makes the already awesome song way more [[SugarWiki/AwesomeMusic badass]].
143** Although the song changes key frequently throughout, this can be heard at the end of [[GratuitousLatin "Revelation (Divus Pennae Ex Tragoedia)"]], where the chorus is played twice in a row but the second time it is modulated down a minor third.
144* "Old Before I Die" by Music/RobbieWilliams, who apparently decided that just naming the song after a "My Generation" lyric wasn't enough. [=GearChange.org=] notes the similarity.
145* Music/KellyClarkson plays this straight on several of her big hits -- just see "A Moment Like This" and "Because of You".
146** Also present on the very 80s sounding "Don't Rush", a duet with Music/VinceGill.
147** Very oddly inverted with the song "Yeah," where the song abruptly pauses and then plays its final chorus a half-step lower (D minor) than the rest of the song (which is in E♭ minor). It makes the otherwise upbeat song seem a lot spookier, but maybe that was the point, in keeping with the darker theme of the "My December" album.
148* Music/{{Nightwish|Band}} ''love'' this trope, and they don't always limit themselves to a single semitone. Two of the more JustForFun/{{egregious}} examples are Tarja's "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u6z8i7LFPNQ#t=3m30s Come Cover Me]]" (going up a perfect fourth from D to G), and Anette's "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2u_HB79QS0g#t=3m00s For The Heart I Once Had]]".
149* "Cake Dance" from the second installment of the ''WebAnimation/ThereSheIs'' saga.
150* Music/WithinTemptation's "Iron" does this for its final phase, taking an already awesome song and making it better.
151* Music/DavidBowie's ''Magic Dance'', from the ''Film/{{Labyrinth}}'' soundtrack, shifts up two semitones in the middle of the song, staying in the new key for nearly two minutes before fading out.
152* "Yuki" by Miyuki Nakajima.
153* "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BUKq7DLo6Ko#t=2m07s Big Big World]]" by Emilia.
154* A song [[ToiletHumour known as]] "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pKQp61e94VE Pee Is Stored in the Balls]]" [[BlatantLies allegedly written]] by Music/DaftPunk has a key change in the ending. ([[DontExplainTheJoke not like it's just Randy "HOME" Goffe who actually made the song pretending it was a lost Daft Punk track, but yeah]])
155* "On Broadway" by The Drifters has one at the end of each verse.
156* The AntiChristmasSong "Have I Got A Present For You" has one before the last chorus.
157* Music/StevieWonder is a ''master'' of modulation, but the most famous of them is [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PY45DkaP9Ls "I Just Called to Say I Love You".]] Notably he does it twice in that song, the first being slightly incongruous both in how early it appears (at the start of the second chorus) and in its positioning (between verse and chorus); the other appears in a more traditional position between the second and third choruses. Starts out in C♯ major, and, for the final choruses, shifts up to D major and then to E♭ major.
158* The Music/PetShopBoys use the semitone variant in "Opportunities (Let's Make Lots Of Money)", the whole tone variant in "King's Cross" and "Go West"(averted in the original by Music/TheVillagePeople), and the minor third variant in "Winner".
159* Bobby Darin's version of "Mack the Knife". He does about seven.
160* "Paper Shoes" by Music/{{Incubus}}, right after a fake ending. Also "Pendulous Threads"
161* Music/{{Sting}}'s "I'm So Happy I Can't Stop Crying" (both the original and the re-recording with Music/TobyKeith) goes up a semitone (E♭ to E) as the tone of the song changes from cynical to happy.
162* Music/{{Yes}}:
163** "I've Seen All Good People" downshifts through the entire gearbox at the end, from E to D to C to B♭ to A♭ to G♭... at which point it finishes fading out. In Music/MatthewSweet and [[Music/TheBangles Susanna Hoffs']] [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k9R7oN5NEpY cover of the song,]] the fadeout ends up [[VocalRangeExceeded nearly too low for Susanna to sing.]]
164** "Owner of a Lonely Heart" gear shifts in the final 20 seconds of the song, but only on the album version; the single version fades out 37 seconds earlier than the album version.
165* Latin-Jazz singer Basia's song "Blame It on the Summer" does the gearshift for the final chorus, then gears back down to its original key for the outro.
166* Music/MarvinGaye and Tammi Terrell's version of "Ain't No Mountain High Enough."
167* Music/TheBeatles did this in only four songs, all of which were Music/PaulMcCartney compositions.
168** "Penny Lane" is an interesting example. The chorus is a full tone ''lower'' (A major) than the verses; the gear shift at the end returns the song to its original key (B major).
169** "Good Day Sunshine" only shifts up at the very last moment during the fade-out. "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (reprise)" modulates from F to G in order to blend in with the following song, "A Day in the Life".
170** "And I Love Her" uniquely shifts up a halftone to start the solo.
171* Happens in Music/RobZombie's "Superbeast," of all places.
172* "Dying in Your Arms" by Trivium.
173* "Winterdreams", the PowerBallad from the 1984 album ''Balls to the Wall'' by Music/{{Accept}}, has three verses, and goes up a key at the beginning of the second verse and again at the third verse.
174* Buddy Rich's version of the song "Mercy, Mercy, Mercy" does this twice.
175* Lionel Richie's "Dancing on the Ceiling." (C to D) He did this first on "Easy" with his old band, the Commodores.
176* Bobby Hebb's "Sunny"... three times. Then there was the Electric Mayhem cover from ''Series/TheMuppetShow'' which added a tempo change with the key change...
177* Trooper's song "We're Here for a Good Time (Not a Long Time)" does this twice.
178* She Moves's "Breaking All the Rules", like many boy and girl band songs, shifts up a whole tone from the bridge to the final chorus.
179* "Down with the Sickness" by Music/{{Disturbed}} does this during its final chorus. Once when the guitarist was giving lessons on Website/YouTube, he said plainly "Just play the main riff I just taught you and move up two strings."
180* This is a common technique used by worship leaders in the Church of Christ, where, in an effort to emphasize a theme or message, the final chorus is raised by, presumably, a half step. However, the proliferation of worship leaders with no formal musical training has led to the idea that you have to do this, completely ruining the effect altogether. Also, they tend to miss the half step and send everyone with any sort of trained ear in the audience into crying fits.
181* Quite a lot of Christian music falls victim to this. It's astoundingly common in Contemporary Christian Music, Praise and Worship, and most forms of Gospel music. Some hymnals even contain pre-written modulations for each hymn, which organists can use to raise the final verse up that semitone. To be fair, it can be very tempting for a church musician to reach for this trick, cliché though it can be, since their job is to sustain musical interest while playing the same melody for several stanzas. And when it's done in [[GospelChoirsAreJustBetter African American Gospel music]], it can be a reminder that Administrivia/TropesAreNotBad.
182* "You Raise Me Up" by Secret Garden (and which has been covered by Music/JoshGroban, Music/{{Westlife}} and Music/CelticWoman) does this ''twice'' -- once after the first chorus and then again near the end.
183* Music/CheapTrick's "Surrender" modulates a half-step from B♭ major to B major right after the intro. And then another half-step to C major just before the last verse.
184* "Sleepless Night" from the Slayers OST.
185* "Where Everybody Knows Your Name", the theme song of Series/{{Cheers}}.
186* Music/ATeens' pop gem "Bouncing off the Ceiling (Upside Down)" goes up a whole step (A major to B major) at the last repetition of the chorus.
187* USA for Africa's "Music/WeAreTheWorld." (E major to F major)
188* Cher's "Strong Enough" does this first at the first chorus, then again at the final chorus.
189** "If I Could Turn Back Time" shifts up a minor third from B to D in the middle of the last chorus. In the middle of a ''sentence'', no less.
190** Back when she was with Sonny Bono, Cher asked him to write a song for her with a key change. His gift to her was "I Got You Babe".
191* Westlife invariably have this in their songs. And if they are sat during the performance, they ''will'' simultaneously stand up and step forward as it happens.
192** Music/MitchBenn's "Boybands" lampshades this with ''"Off the stools!"''
193* Music/RodStewart and Music/JeffBeck's cover of The Impressions' "People Get Ready."
194* The Music/TheJacksonFive use it in "I'll Be There" where they move up a minor third during verses.
195* Music/JanetJackson:
196** "Doesn't Really Matter" modulates up a half-step twice, first at the last phrase of the last bridge, then a second time at the beginning of the final chorus.
197** "Together Again" shifts up by a minor third at the last verse.
198* Music/WhitneyHouston's "How Will I Know" does a gear change a third ''down''.
199** And her super-hit [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H9nPf7w7pDI "I Will Always Love You"]] does a memorable gear up change before the end (''... I wish you love... (hold your breath...)'' [[[{{Beat}} BANG!]]] ''[[IncrediblyLongNote AND IIIIIIII]]...!''). [[CoveredUp The original]] Music/DollyParton version, however, lacks this.
200** Another Whitney Houston power ballad, "I Have Nothing", similarly combines this with {{Dramatic Pause}}s at the start of the final chorus ("...[[PunctuatedForEmphasis don't... make... me... CLOSE! one more door...]]")
201* Music/JesseMcCartney - "Because You Live" transposes up a minor third for the final choruses. (A major to C major)
202* This is fairly common in the spacesynth/synthdance genre. Haggeman (Thomas Hagfors)'s songs "Digital Clearing Service (formerly Intimate Shaver)" and "Botte's Vernal Dance" both have a gear change downward during their bridge sections. The former changes back afterwards, the latter stays there. "Space Relations" has a standard upward major second gear change.
203** Another spacesynth/dance example: Myvoice - Alertia, from D minor to F minor. Myvoice's "Nosmo King" changes upward a minor second, then [[LastNoteNightmare ends with a literal bang]] shortly after. "Far From Home" goes up from G minor to A minor for the bridge, then changes back.
204** Mindxpander - Star Runner (major second), Windchaser (minor third), and Town Circus (up twice, then down once). In fact, almost every one of his songs does this in some form.
205** Laserdance's "The Lost Battle", "No Escape"(up a perfect fifth, back down, then up a second, then a minor third), "Voyage of Discovery", and "Fly Over the New Territory", all from the ''Laserdance Strikes Back'' album.
206** Anders Lundqvist's "The Ordeal" and "Hyperspace".
207** Everdune has too many examples to list here.
208* The Communards' cover of Thelma Houston's "Don't Leave Me This Way" (itself a cover of Harold Melvin & The Bluenotes) starts a step lower than Houston's version, then changes to that version's key after a rising overdubbed "aaaaaaaaaAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHH" audible in several nearby galaxies.
209* "[=MacArthur=] Park", in Donna Summer's CoverVersion, modulates its last refrain a step down. The original (and Music/WeirdAlYankovic's abridged parody "Jurassic Park") enters the last chorus a perfect fourth higher, in F rather than C; the vocal ensemble takes over at the BigNo, where [[VocalRangeExceeded the melody rises too high for Richard Harris to sing]].
210* "Do I Have to Say the Words?" by Bryan Adams shifts up a semitone in the middle of each verse.
211* "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WECy4tkEPno Love Don't Roam]]" from ''Series/DoctorWho'' is a continuous escalation of gear changes.
212* ''Film/MaryPoppins'':
213** "Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious" (even though the sound of it is something quite atrocious) shifts up a half-step before each verse, during the "Um-diddle-iddle-iddle-um-diddle-aye" bridge. (B♭ major to B major to C major) And not only that, [[MotorMouth the song gets FASTER AND FASTER each time.]] And if you sing it loud enough you'll always sound precocious (Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious)!
214** "Step in Time" has one, as well.
215* The Mike Flowers Pops' version of "Wonderwall" shifts down a full step for the last verse.
216* Yes, this does happen occasionally in punk rock. "Infected" by Music/BadReligion shifts from G minor to A minor at the start of its bridge, and remains in A minor until the end. "Americana" by Music/TheOffspring, meanwhile, is played mostly in E minor but shifts to the key of F minor for its final verse and then abruptly ends.
217* The bridge of 3rd Party's "Can You Feel It" key-changes a third down.
218* Occurs frequently in Platform/{{MOD}} and {{Demoscene}} music. "Ethnomagic" by NHP goes up a whole tone in mid-riff halfway through the song. Purple Motion's "World of Plastic" goes up a minor third at the first refrain, and up another third at the second. "Shadowrun" also modulates by a minor third. "Satellite One", also by PM, changes keys four times before looping. "Control" by The Loop does a more conventional half-step up near the end.
219* Zager & Evans's "In the Year 2525" does this twice.
220* Music/CelineDion is a repeat offender with this one. Below are just a few examples:
221** [[Film/Titanic1997 "My Heart Will Go On"]] goes up a major third (from E to A♭) for the last refrain.
222** "That's the Way it Is" goes up a perfect fourth to A.
223** "Because You Loved Me" also features the same thing.
224** Dion also does a gear change near the end of "I'm Alive," where it goes from a minor-like tone to a major-like one. (E&9837; major to F major)
225** Her cover of "All by Myself" also uses this technique while [[CoveredUp the original]] by Music/EricCarmen doesn't.
226* Just about EVERY SINGLE SONG from the Broadway musical Hairspray, and sometimes multiple times in the same song.
227* Several songs from the children's album ''Free to Be... You and Me'' incorporate one or more gear changes:
228** The title song by The New Seekers, Music/DianaRoss's "When We Grow Up", Rosey Grier's "It's Alright to Cry", and Creator/MarloThomas's "Glad To Have a Friend Like You" are straight semitone examples.
229** "Parents Are People" by Creator/MarloThomas and Music/HarryBelafonte shifts up a minor third from B to D for the latter's verse, then drops down a whole tone to C for the duet finale.
230** The Voices of East Harlem's "Sisters and Brothers" takes the cake with four key changes. The B-section("Ain't we happy?... Ain't we lucky?...") modulates down a major third to C, then shifts up a whole tone twice, returning to the song's home key of E. Following a [[SubduedSection relatively quiet]] {{Scatting}} bridge, the final chorus upshifts to F with a particularly [[NightmareFuel unsettling]] [[ScareChord ascending strings glissando]] accompanied by a concurrently rising "Aaaaah!" vocal.
231* Sheb Wooley's "Purple People Eater" starts in D and gear-changes every subsequent verse except for the fourth, ending in F.
232* "Dirty Laundry" by Don Henley.
233* Terry Jacks's "Seasons in the Sun" does this ''three'' times -- once midway through the song, and twice towards the end. By contrast, the song on which it's based, Music/JacquesBrel's "Le Moribond", stays in the same key throughout.
234* "All These Things That I've Done" by The Killers has the bridge rather than the chorus shifting up four times, which is likely why the title is often mistaken to be some permutation of "I got soul, but I'm not a soldier."
235* "Jump (For My Love)" by The Pointer Sisters jumps up ''a minor sixth'', from B♭ to G♭, in the middle of the last chorus to boot.
236* "Thousandfold" by Eluveitie. Also, "Inis Mona"
237* Deborah Cox's "Nobody's Supposed to Be Here" and "I Never Knew". Both key changes are rather awkward, the former does it between the second bridge and second chorus.
238* Raffi's cover of "He's Got the Whole World In His Hands."
239** The Sandpipers version changes key ''four times'' from D to E to F to G.
240* Happens in the final verse of Music/WeirdAlYankovic's country parody entitled (oddly enough) [[Music/RunningWithScissors "Truck Driving Song"]]. Considering Al generally doesn't use this trope in his other original songs, this probably counts as a lampshade hanging.
241** He also does it in [[Music/{{Alapalooza}} "Frank's 2000" TV"]], but as a style parody of Music/{{REM}}, it's meant to be a ShoutOut to the Gear Change in "Stand" (a song which Al also spoofed directly as [[Music/UHFOriginalMotionPictureSoundtrackAndOtherStuff “Spam”]]).
242** Another example is [[Music/StraightOuttaLynwood "Don't Download This Song"]], again used as a stylistic choice (the song is a style parody of charity song ballads such as "We Are the World" by USA For Africa).
243* "When You Believe" by Music/MariahCarey and Music/WhitneyHouston gear-changes twice, from D to E at the second chorus, then from E to F♯ at the final chorus.
244* The final chorus of Never Shout Never's "Can't Stand It" shifts up a semitone.
245* Almost ''every'' song by Onitsuka Chihiro has a key change like this toward the end.
246** The same can be said for Ayumi Hamasaki.
247* Many Franchise/DisneyAnimatedCanon songs. From ''{{WesternAnimation/Aladdin}}'', "A Whole New World", which goes up a minor third for Jasmine's half of the song. Even better, it changes keys three times (minor third, down a step, up another third) in the RewrittenPopVersion and stage adaptation. The stage version of "Arabian Nights" also has a gear change.
248** Creator/{{Disney}} songs do this, full stop. "Prince Ali" does it about '''six''' times! Including a massive one near the end that could pop a lung. It's so bad that Robin Williams, despite his impressive vocal range, can't keep up as the song finishes.
249* Music/DragonForce's "Fury of the Storm" and "Heart of a Dragon".
250* Sisqo's "Thong Song".
251* The themes to ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZsVZUJVVaIE Dallas]]'' and ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8TwXyNx4nxk Knots Landing]]''.
252* Music/TheDoors' "Hello, I Love You."
253* The second theme (1988-2001) to PBS's ''Nightly Business Report'' changed keys around the "circle of fifths", eventually coming back to C. The other theme songs also use this trope aplenty.
254* ''Wings for Marie/10000 Days (Wings Pt. 2)'' by Music/{{Tool}} use this to great (and dramatic) effect towards the end of each song. ''Wings'' is A minor throughout most of the song, but at one point near the end, the guitar just decides to change the key to B minor. The effect is rather subtle and the song stays in this key until the climax, at which it reverts back to A for the outro. ''10000 Days'', as a continuation to the first part, is in A minor through the entire song, all the way up through the instrumental breakdown. The key change to B is much more dramatic as it happens right at the moment of climax and reverts back to A for the outro exactly the same way as in ''Wings'', bringing it into a sort of reprise.
255* Music/MariahCarey's cover of Foreigner's "I Wanna Know What Love Is" gear-shifts a half-step down.
256** She does this in some of her other songs, too. Such as "Mine Again."
257* "Wings" by Music/{{Galneryus}} goes up a major third at the end (4 semitones or 2 whole steps), which is fairly uncommon.
258* Even J-pop does this. For example, [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XdUAp3P1b2E 華爛漫 -Flowers-]] by TЁЯRA, from ''VideoGame/DanceDanceRevolution [=SuperNOVA=]'' onward.
259** Other Music/{{Bemani}} songs that do this include "Dive" (including its ''DDRMAX'' remix, and the recurrent "Dive Into The Night" by Riyu Kosaka), "CANDY☆", "CANDY♥", and "Can't Stop Falling in Love".
260** The ''Private BEMANI Academy'' song [[FinalBoss "Elemental Creation"]] by dj TAKA and DJ YOSHITAKA inverts this, going down in key for the last one-quarter of the song.
261* The ending theme song in the second ''WesternAnimation/{{Care Bears|Movie II A New Generation}}'' movie shifts downward from G major to F major.
262* ''God Knows'' from the Literature/HaruhiSuzumiya anime.
263* Less common in Eurobeat than other genres, but "Goin' On" by Lolita goes from B to C at the last chorus. An unusual example is "Send Me an Angel"(no relation to the Real Life song) by Momo, which modulates the synthesizer riff a step down after the first chorus, but the rest of the song remains in the normal key. Later, the synth goes back up to its original key in mid-riff. Irene's "Cool Lover" from the same label (SCP Music) does similar.
264* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yAeIOhGfZV0 Can't We Try]] by Dan Hill & Vonda Shepard does this by a half-step in mid-bridge. Then it goes up another half step for the fade-out coda, in mid-sentence.
265* Music/BetteMidler's [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e00ztnHx3Wk "To Deserve You"]] goes from F to F♯ at the final chorus.
266* Music/JessicaSimpson's [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DzY3gqeghHo "Where You Are"]], in typical power ballad fashion, upshifts from G minor to G♯ minor in the last phrase of the bridge.
267* Unusually, especially for trance music, [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e5RFBI37_rM "Alegria" by Jonatan F.]] (remix of the theme song from the Creator/CirqueDuSoleil [[Theatre/{{Alegria}} show of the same name]]) does multiple key changes during the final climax.
268* Music/ScatmanJohn's [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OUWBAy3bATI Scatman's World]] features a gear-change at the end.
269* Many, ''many'' Music/SonataArctica songs, ranging from half a step ("San Sebastian") to a perfect fourth ("Don't Say A Word"). "Wildfire" even goes ''down'' a minor third.
270* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yCC_b5WHLX0 Listen To Your Heart]] by Roxette shifts up a major third.
271** [[Film/PrettyWoman It Must Have Been Love]] also shifts up a third, though on the minor scale this time.
272* Edyta Gorniak's "One and One" and "Perfect Moment" (better known from being CoveredUp by Robert Miles f/Maria Nayler, and Martine [=McCutcheon=], respectively)
273* Live's "Run To The Water" modulates up a full step (C to D) for the final chorus and coda. {{Lampshade|Hanging}}d in the video by the sky opening up and raining on the band and the drought-stricken futuristic PoliceState they've found themselves in.
274* Amusingly enough, Music/DriveByTruckers do this twice in "I Do Believe".
275* Berlin's "Take My Breath Away.", [[https://youtu.be/Bx51eegLTY8?t=163 two-thirds in]].
276* Music/{{Meshuggah}}'s "Spasm" features guitars tuned down an octave and a half from standard. That's ridiculously low by any standards, but apparently it wasn't good enough for them, because the last repetition of the main riff goes ''down'' another half-step. So instead of showing off how high they can sing, the change shows off how low they can tune their guitars.
277* "Over the Hills and Far Away" by GaryMoore and made famous by Music/{{Nightwish|Band}}, in the final chorus.
278* Buckcherry's "For the Movies" modulates up halfway through the final chorus.
279* A "Visit Seoul" campaign had a song by both SNSD and Super Junior called S.E.O.U.L., which featured one of these. This makes the song sound quite bone-chilling.
280* Westlife's cover of Music/BillyJoel's "Uptown Girl" (the original by the latter doesn't have it). Interestingly, the Westlife cover begins with a lower key than the original, then steps it up to the original's key at the end.
281* "How the World Fell Under Darkness" by Music/TheProtomen features several modulations towards the end of the song.
282* In other Franchise/MegaMan fan music, Music/TheMegas play this straight in "I Refuse to Believe," the song based on Mega Man 3's final boss theme.
283* Music/TheBlackEyedPeas started to do this on "Imma Be"... and then on the next album had two more, that even warn it's gonna change abruptly ("DIRTY BIT!" in "The Time (Dirty Bit)" and "MEGA SWITCH UP!" in "Just Can't Get Enough").
284* Music/{{Oasis}}' [[Music/BeHereNow "All Around the World"]] begins with several verses and choruses in B, hops up to C for a couple of choruses (but only one in [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MywWolXGIx8 the music video]]), and then concludes in D for the final twenty- or thirty-ish chorus repetitions. (Some sheet music transcriptions of the song also notate a few bars as being in A: the "It's gonna be OK" repeats between the C and D choruses.) Noel Gallagher [[http://www.musicfanclubs.org/oasis/beherenow.html commented]], possibly with tongue in cheek: "Imagine how much better '[[Music/TheBeatles Hey Jude]]' would have been with three key changes towards the end!"
285* Emiliani Torrini's song [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iZ9vkd7Rp-g Jungle Drum]] gears up for the finale.
286* Music/{{Radiohead}}'s "Sulk" ascends from G to A for its guitar solo and final chorus.
287* A Eurodance example is "Shocking The Dancefloor" by BPM. Other Eurodance examples include "Feel The Beat" by Beat Society, "Táncolj!" by Magic Kefir, "Let Me Love You" by Da Buzz, "Life" by E-Type, and "Love Me" by Magic Nation.
288* Maarja's song "What in This World" starts in C, but goes up to D right before the chorus plays the first time, and stays in D until it goes up to E right before the chorus plays the second time, where it stays for the rest of the song.
289* "Snoopy's Christmas (Christmas Bells)" by the Royal Guardsmen transposes up a semitone each verse -- four times in all. The song starts in F and ends in A♭. The original "Snoopy vs The Red Baron" also does this, but three times.
290* "Back on the Chain Gang" by The Pretenders (full step)
291** "Day after Day" is even more this trope.
292* Music/{{Genesis|Band}} did this with "Music/InvisibleTouch".
293** Genesis also added successive whole-tone shifts up in the fadeouts of [[Music/FromGenesisToRevelation "A Place to Call My Own"]] and [[Music/FoxtrotAlbum "Time Table"]].
294** Phil Collins also did this on his solo album’s title track “Dance Into the Light”.
295* Music/TypeONegative's "Haunted" does a gear change from A to B♭ at the coda, ''after'' the "[[TitleDrop I'm haunted]]" refrain.
296* Edge of Dawn's "Save My Soul" is another genre-atypical([[{{Industrial}} Futurepop]]) example, going from G minor to A minor for the last repetition of the chorus.
297* "Up The Junction" by Music/{{Squeeze|Band}} starts out in E, then drops to C♯ minor for the bridge, then goes up to D on the next verse, and finishes in the original key. What makes this interesting is that it’s [[TheDayTheMusicLied setting us up for a happy ending]] to the story the song’s been telling, but the lyrics after the final key change turn out to be about [[DownerEnding how the singer’s life completely went to crap]].
298* Dyce, a [[OneBookAuthor one-album]] Swedish Eurotrance group featuring Sofia Lovgren of Domino, did this with their obligatory ballad "Colors".
299* Music/BritneySpears does this in "Sometimes" and [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4vvBAONkYwI&ob=av2e "Lucky"]], and probably others.
300* Music/{{Taco}} did this in "After Eight" by a whole step at the second verse, and in "Puttin' On the Ritz" by a whole step at the tap-dancing break.
301* "Sun of Jamaica", the biggest hit of Germany's Goombay Dance Band, goes up a whole step for the final repetition of the chorus, which then fades out.
302* Happens in [[Music/AndreaBocelli Bocelli's]] "Con Te Partirò," a shift that usually provokes rapturous applause (see: the concert DVD ''A Night in Tuscany''). Donna Summer's TranslatedCoverVersion, "I Will Go With You", also does it.
303* Reina's [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1QYcClEq8d4 "Find Another Woman"]] has a double minor third key change from E♭ to G♭ to A in the final chorus. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oE-g_1hlmx8 "Anything for Love"]] does a traditional semitone modulation from D to E♭.
304* DJ Ötzi's songs "Hey Baby" and "Burger Dance" each have a key change a semitone up.
305* As an encore to the Theatre/LesMiserables 25th Anniversary Concert, Colm Wilkinson, Alfie Boe, Simon Bowman and John Owen-Jones (who have all played Jean Valjean in various performances) [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s-0MS72uHSQ performed "Bring Him Home" as a quartet]], and added one about two-thirds of the way through. It's more amusing because [[ThrowItIn the song isn't actually performed that way]] [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UaI9BPKhExk in the musical]].
306* The "Trololo" song by Eduard Khil does this a couple times.
307* ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9dG5KpRd3iA Angels Brought Me Here]]'' by Australian Idol winner Guy Sebastian has one when it goes from verse to chorus. It's a little jarring, but effective.
308* "Storm of Light" by Thomas Petersen f/ Franca Morgano, at least the original mix, modulates from F to G towards the end.
309* Music/FreddieMercury's "Love Kills", and by extension Music/LittleBoots' {{cover version}}, moves up a step for the final chorus, then up a minor third from there for the ending solo.
310* "Dancing Days" by Music/LedZeppelin.
311* E-Type's "Life", by way of a bridge passage before the final repeat of the chorus.
312* Macy Gray's [[OneHitWonder sole hit of note]], "I Try", modulates up a semitone mid-sentence at the beginning of the last chorus.
313* "Around The World (La La La La La)" by ATC. [[CoveredUp The original Russian song by Ruki Vverh]] doesn't follow that way.
314* "Only Yesterday" by the Carpenters, when they repeat the final chorus to fade out.
315* "Moskau" by Music/DschinghisKhan waits until the last 20 seconds to go up a semitone, from F minor to F♯ minor.
316* "A Dream World In The Clouds" by Matthew Villani does this a total of twelve times in the first half before settling on F for the remainder of the song, yes it goes from F to the F an octave higher. [[JustifiedTrope Justified in this case, however]] because it's meant to signify floating upwards into the clouds.
317* Appropriately enough, "Under My Wheels" by Alice Cooper has one of these just before the final verse.
318* "Whatever Mattered" by mind.in.a.box, one of their obligatory {{power ballad}}s, shifts up a minor third from C minor to E♭ minor for the final two choruses, after the instrumental bridge. "Doubt" downshifts from D minor to A minor between the verse and chorus, then modulates to C minor for its instrumental coda and fade-out. "Unknown" shifts its B-section a step higher than the rest of the song.
319* Hall and Oates' "She's Gone" contains a series of steps in its final bridge that are not so much a gear change as the driver working through the gears after joining the highway.
320* EVERY. SINGLE. DAMN. American Idol/X-factor winner's song.
321* Became such a crutch in Music/StockAitkenWaterman songs that Morris Minor & The Majors parodied it:
322--> This is the keychange, the fabulous keychange\
323It's a standard device to stop us sounding mundane
324* "Marathon" by Music/{{Rush|Band}} has an amazing one before the final chorus, moving up a whole step from B major to C♯ major. "High Water" moves up a minor third, from A major to C major, for the final chorus, while "Superconductor" goes up whole tones twice for the last two repetitions of the chorus, moving from C to D to E.
325* Music/MrBig's "To Be With You" very blatantly does this [[https://youtu.be/-v9ybMMqJQs?t=517 on the final chorus]]. The brief pause before the change almost makes it sound like they're a little embarrassed about using the trope, and arguably might be considered a subtle bit of LampshadeHanging.
326* The Music/{{Motorhead}} song "Damage Case" starts in the key of E♭ but then, after the solo, it shifts to the key of F for the final chorus. Ditto to Music/{{Metallica}}'s CoverVersion.
327* The Music/{{Queen|Band}} song [[Music/TheMiracle "Breakthru."]] After the intro, the song is played in the key of F major. However, after the solo, the song shifts keys to F♯ major.
328** The majority of "Show Must Go On" is in B minor, but the second verse jumps up a whole step to C♯ minor, and then drops back to B minor for the chorus as if nothing happened.
329* Australian folk singer Butterfly Boucher's single "Another White Dash" modulates up a step in the final chorus, and then stays there for a modulated reprisal of the opening verse.
330* Michael W. Smith's "Place in This World," a 1991 Christian pop hit that crossed over into the top 20 mainstream charts.
331* Music/NeilSedaka, in many of his songs.
332** "Hey Little Devil", from F major to G♭ (or F♯) major at the end.
333** Also in "Happy Birthday Sweet Sixteen" which goes from D♭ to D for the final chorus.
334** In Tony Christie's version of "Amarillo", the last chorus goes from A major to B♭ major.
335* Music/RonnieMilsap's "Turn That Radio On" is mostly in G, but goes up to A on the choruses. Somewhat unusually, it goes back down to G on the last line of the chorus ("Baby, hold me close") instead of waiting for the chorus to finish.
336* Music/{{Enya}} has several songs that count as this;
337** "White is In the Winter Night" starts in B major, then modulates up a semitone for the last verse.
338** "One Toy Soldier" is in A major at the start, then goes up a half-step halfway through.
339* Sally Shapiro's "All My Life" modulates from A♭ minor to B♭ minor at the ending synth solo and fade-out. Similarly, the last refrain of "What Can I Do"? shifts from C to D. "Architectured Love" has a B minor verse, an E minor bridge, and a D minor chorus, with the coda alternating between the latter two.
340* Electronic dance music is not immune, with Swedish singer September and her highly formulaic "Can't Get Over" (2007) featuring a typical example on the last repeat of the chorus.
341* Music/MichaelJackson's [[Music/{{Bad}} "Man in the Mirror"]] shifts keys midway, occurring when the lyrics hit the word "change", thus making it a {{Lampshaded}} StealthPun.
342** Also happens towards the end of [[Music/OffTheWall "Rock with You"]] and [[Music/HistoryPastPresentAndFutureBookI "[[https://youtu.be/DN6It52dsmY?t=219 Earth Song]]"]].
343* Music/{{REM}}'s [[Music/{{Green}} "Stand"]]. Twice. It also uses other effects, like a wah-wah pedal, in order to be as intentionally cheesy as possible.
344** "Shaking Through" from Music/{{Murmur}} also has one, going from D to E in the last verse.
345* The last verse of Music/DeepPurple's "Smooth Dancer".
346* The Johan Agebjörn & Sally Shapiro remix of Holy Ghost!'s "Hold My Breath" shifts up a half-step at the coda, which does not occur in other versions.
347* Creator/MichelleCreber's cover of "I Hope You Dance" modulates up a minor 3rd for the final chorus. The original version by Music/LeeAnnWomack didn't do this.
348* St. Vincent's "Psychopath" does this several times throughout the song, most notably during the chorus.
349* The song "I Spy" by Music/{{Pulp}} starts in the key of C Minor, shifts to C♯ Minor for its final verse, and then shifts back to its native key for the outro.
350* Firehouse's "Love a Lifetime" shows just how effective this trope can be to pack some extra emotion into the end of a rock ballad.
351* "Your Smiling Face" by James Taylor gets in early with a whole tone up before the second verse and packs another one in after the second chorus.
352* Music/MaryJBlige's "Give Me You" upshifts between the last bridge and the last chorus.
353* Happens in the middle bridge of the Music/FlamingLips' "Do You Realize??", [[Administrivia/TropesAreTools usually accompanied by very loud cheers at live shows]]; the song bumps up from C major to E-flat major before returning to C major.
354* Music/TheReignOfKindo ''loves'' this trope. A short list of songs featuring this trope: "Needle and Thread" (G minor to C minor), "Great Blue Sea" (D♯ minor to G♯ minor to D minor), "Till We Make Our Ascent" (D major to C♯ minor to E minor and back to D major), "Thrill of the Fall" (C minor to B♭ minor), "Out of Sight, Out of Mind" (E♭ minor to D minor), "Battling the Years" (B♭ minor to E♭ minor), "Help It" (A minor to B♭ minor), "Make a Sound" (G minor to G♯ minor), "Romancing a Stranger" (B♭ minor to G minor).
355* Highway Superstar's "Burn This City" steps up by a whole tone during the bridge leading to the finale.
356* Music/{{Beyonce}}'s "Love On Top" features a 4× combo gear change at the end.
357* Music/TheyMightBeGiants' song [[Music/FloodTheyMightBeGiants "Birdhouse In Your Soul"]] employs this in much the same way as "Love on Top", once between verses and several in a row during the ending repeat.
358* Hammerfall's "The Dragon Lies Bleeding" is a straight example, rising one whole tone for the last chorus.
359* Kristine's [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dueYSC-Yafc "Sleepless Nights"]] shifts from F to F♯ for its [[SugarWiki/AwesomeMusic epic]] [[RaisedLighterTribute lighters-in-the-air]] finale. Fitting for an 80s-{{retraux}} {{power ballad}}.
360* Trance song "Lullabye" by Galaxee, starts in G minor, shifts up to B♭ minor (+3 semitones) after a break, then, without any warning, shifts up to C♯ minor (another +3 semitones) for the rest of the song.
361* Music/RobbieWilliams' "Party Like a Russian" (end of discussion) has one near the end.
362* "Tong Hua" ("Fairy Tale" in Chinese) by Michael Wong is structured ABCBCCC, with C being the chorus. It begins in G♭ major up until the first repeat of the chorus goes up to A♭ for the second repeat, and finally B♭ for the third repeat. The lyrics of the chorus are changed slightly with each repetition: he first says that he wishes to be her angel as in a fairy tale, then that he wants to, and finally that he will.
363* Mr. President's [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L006_QH3B4E "I'll Follow the Sun"]] upshifts from F minor to G minor after the rap section. Ditto "Up 'n Away".
364* Jumalatar's "Are We Thinking the Same Thing?" and "Private Eye" both modulate from C♯ minor to D minor.
365* The New Division's "Vices" downshifts from A minor to A♭ minor.
366* Kim Wilde's "The Second Time"...she cheats a bit as [[VocalRangeExceeded the notes get too high]].
367* The finale of The Rain Within's "Close Your Eyes" upshifts a half-step from B♭ to B, following a mid-chorus DramaticPause.
368* Most arrangements of "Winter Wonderland" rise up a major third for the "In the meadow we can build a snowman" part. In the middle of the stanza, the song shifts up a minor third before completing the cycle by lowering back a perfect fifth.
369* The last chorus of "My Special Angel" by Bobby Helms goes up one semitone from D♭ to D.
370* The third verse of "Venus in Blue Jeans" by Jimmy Clanton is sung twice, the second time one semitone higher from D to E♭.
371* After the singing part of "The Letter" by The Box Tops ends, the song shifts from A minor to B♭ minor.
372* "Itsy Bitsy Teenie Weenie Yellow Polkadot Bikini" by Brian Hyland starts in D and goes to E♭ starting with the third verse.
373* The Turtles' "She'd Rather Be with Me" goes from B to C during the scatting part.
374* Cheryl Lynn's "Got to Be Real" shifts up a whole tone after the second B-section ("Our love is here to stay, hey, hey HEY!").
375* Brian [=McKnight=]'s "Back at One" changes gears from B to C at the end of the bridge, during the line "Just in the nick of tiiiiime...". Music/MarkWills's cover follows suit.
376* "Wanna Buy an Organ" by Music/DaYoopers switches from C Minor on the verses to C Major at the chorus.
377* The German pop duo Nina & Mike did this all the time, often more than once per song. See for example "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i_V4PDKWpGI Aloha Ohe, bis wir uns wiederseh'n"]], "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4cQ1Yzjc8kY Kinder der Sonne]]", etc.
378* The [[TeenageDeathSongs teen tragedy song]] "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dpjs9nEBVOQ Patches]]", by Dickey Lee, does this after every verse.
379* "One Tin Soldier", first recorded by The Original Caste, then CoveredUp by Coven, does this before the third verse.
380* "Fly Little White Dove, Fly" by The Bells has one, earlier in the song than many.
381* The Creator/BigBadVoodooDaddy version of "Old Macdonald" goes up a half step at ''every verse''; since there are six verses, it ends a full third higher than it started.
382* Music/BillyBragg's "Rotting on Remand" shifts from C to D, a little earlier in the song than many examples.
383* The Royal Guardsmen change keys three times in "Snoopy vs The Red Baron" and four times in the Christmas version.
384* Music/{{Falco}} does it on [[https://youtu.be/cVikZ8Oe_XA?t=154 Rock Me Amadeus]] towards the end.
385* [[https://youtu.be/obvTa_dcFZU?t=102 "Follow The Sound"]] by Van Dutch, Silver Nikan & Dee Dee unexpectedly shifts up a minor third midway through the second verse.
386* [[https://youtu.be/lQlIhraqL7o?t=130 "I Just Had Sex"]] (feat. Akon) does it during the climax.
387* [[https://youtu.be/2VAEHjwDmPQ?t=122 Till Death]] by Japanese Breakfast does this in the end, though it's a shift downwards instead of upwards.
388* Fable Cry's ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gXaBhOkUJwU&t=4m12s Dead Or Alive (For Now)]]'' has one for the final repetition of the chorus.
389* "Dream Boy/Dream Girl" by Cynthia and Johnny O. goes down a minor third for Johnny's verse, then back up afterwards.
390* ''Music/{{Insania}}'''s [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OSSiVGeB_M4 Dream]] ends with repeating the lead melody overlayed with a MetalScream which then jumps up an octave after the second repetition.
391* Limahl's "[[https://youtu.be/Gf1WT8VEZxk?t=125 Never Ending Story]]" shifts up midway through the song.
392* Ollie Wride plays this straight with "Back to Life", but subverts it with "Miracle Mile", which modulates down a semitone for the bridge, then shifts back up for the finale.
393* Matthew Wilder's "Break My Stride" shifts up a whole step from F to G following the bridge passage("Never had another girl like you...").
394* Music/BoneyM's "Young, Free, and Single" upshifts from G minor to A minor for the last two choruses.
395* The finale of Music/{{Styx}}'s "Mr Roboto" ("The time has come at last...") leaps up a full octave.
396* "Dance With My Father" by Music/LutherVandross goes from B♭ to C towards the end.
397* James Ingram's "I Don't Have the Heart" goes up from D to E near the end.
398* "You Don't Own Me" by Lesley Gore shifts several times. Going from G, to A♭, to A and finally to B♭.
399* Similarly with Music/DollyParton's "Here You Come Again", which starts out in F♯, then goes to G, then finally to A♭.
400* "The End of the World" by Skeeter Davis is mostly in B♭, but shifts to B in the last verse.
401* The final choruses of Music/{{M83}}'s "Oh Yes You're There Everyday" shift down a whole tone three times, from G minor to F minor to D♯ minor to C♯ minor, along with using FallingBass.
402* Played straight, then defied in "First Date" by Music/NinjaSexParty. The key picks up when Danny Sexbang sings about killing one person, then five, and then it rises ''again'' when he talks about killing ''ten'' people... then he decides that ten murders is too much for a first date and the key drops back down when he limits the killings to five.
403* Music/BelindaCarlisle's "Heaven Is a Place on Earth".
404* Roxi Drive's "Lost in the Game" modulates up a minor third for its ending repeat-and-fade chorus, nearly exceeding her vocal range.
405* "Ti Cento" by Matia Bazar. Antonella Ruggiero does an amazing feat there and drives the truck into orbit.
406* "1000 Nights and One" by East Beat Syndicate modulates in whole-tone increments through a full octave before returning to G minor.
407* The UrExample for the rock era might be "Silhouettes" by The Rays from 1957, which modulates before the final verse to underline the song's PlotTwist.
408* [[Music/{{Caramell}} Caramella Girls]]' "How Can You Say Goodbye?" and "Wish Upon a Star" shift up a whole tone and a semitone, respectively, at their last choruses.
409* Jacob Collier shifts the last verse up a ''quarter tone'', from G major to G '''half-sharp''' major, in his [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mPZn4x3uOac acapella rendition]] of "In the Bleak Midwinter".
410* "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=biGF7e-FALk Blood Red Dawn]]" by ''Music/{{Keldian}}'' impressivly swings up in pitch no less than four times in the final chorus.
411* Edison Lighthouse's "Love Grows (Where My Rosemary Goes)" shifts from A major to B♭ major after the second repetition of the bridge.
412* "Tak Bisakah" by [[Music/NoahIndonesia Peterpan]] goes up a whole tone for its last chorus.
413* Music/{{Regina}}'s "Beat Of Love" transitions from the vocal bridge to the guitar solo with a semitone modulation from C minor to C♯ minor, then downshifts for a repeat of the bridge before shifting back up for the closing chorus.
414* Vicki Sue Robinson's "Turn the Beat Around", and by extension Music/GloriaEstefan's {{cover version}}, steps up a semitone after the percussion break.
415* Music/MichaelBuble's cover of Music/DeanMartin's "Sway" shifts from D minor to D♯ minor after a fake-out ending pause.
416* The Sam Browne version of "The Sun Has Got His Hat On" has a key change for its instrumental ending.
417* Music/MeghanTrainor's "Dear Future Husband" modulates up a semitone from C♯ major to D major at the second chorus.
418* Music/RayCharles' cover of Music/TheBeatles' "Music/LetItBe" shifts up a minor third between the second chorus and third verse.
419* "Music/BadApple" is written in the key of D♯ Minor for the majority of its runtime, but the melody jumps up during the last chorus.
420* Music/{{Ultravox}}'s "[[Music/{{Quartet}} Hymn]]" steps up a whole tone from E minor to F♯ minor for the ending chorus and fade-out.
421* Fifty Fifty's "Cupid"(only the original, not the Twin version) modulates from B minor to C minor for its final two choruses.
422* ClassicalMusic example, and possibly a big influence on the entire concept in popular music: Music/MauriceRavel's ''Boléro'' suddenly shifts from C major to E major in its final minute, providing a climactic release and resolution to the piece's signature [[BoleroEffect slow-burning repetition]].
423[[/folder]]
424
425[[folder:Rock Music]]
426* "Beast and the Harlot" by Music/AvengedSevenfold has one at the refrain at the end of the song that almost makes it sound like a Hillbilly Hoedown. According to the band, this was done as a sort of compromise to smooth out the transition between the final chorus and the outro (which are in different keys), even though they didn’t particularly like the result.
427* Music/BonJovi's "Livin' on a Prayer" (a minor third up), and "I'll Be There for You".
428* Celestial Wish are a fan of this trope, 'Our Creation', 'Crossing the River', and 'Dear Beloved' all have very sudden gear changes on the final chorus.
429* Music/TheWho:
430** "Music/MyGeneration"... multiple times. The studio version goes up from G to A to B♭ to C; the live version usually starts in A and works its way up to D.
431** "[[Music/TheWhoSellOut I Can See for Miles]]" pole vaults up a perfect fourth from E to A for the last verse and chorus.
432** "[[Music/{{Tommy}} Pinball Wizard]]" jumps from B to D for the final verse - then drops back down to B♭ for the instrumental fadeout.
433** "You Better, You Bet" also does this near the end, shifting up from C to D.
434* Music/ThreeDogNight's 1971 hit "Joy to the World" shifts up a whole step from D major to E major for a bridge—and then back to the original D major for another chorus.
435* Music/{{Kiss}}'s "Crazy Crazy Nights" is supposed to be the worst offender of the lot.
436* Kittie's "Funeral for Yesterday" ends with two repetitions of the chorus. The first ends with a noticeable shift upwards - and the second kicks in at an ''even higher'' pitch.
437* There’s an absolutely incredible example at the end of “House of Fire” by Music/AliceCooper.
438* Interestingly, PowerMetal band Nocturnal Rites frequently puts at least one modulation in most of their songs, but rarely use this trope.
439* The ending riff of Music/TheKinks' "Come Dancing" shifts down a major third.
440* Music/{{Heart|Band}}'s "Will You Be There In The Morning" does this, though this is atypical of their work, probably because this is a "Mutt" Lange song they felt pressured into recording as he was producing their album at the time.
441* A nice Heavy Metal example is "Destroyed" by Music/{{Hypocrisy}} which changes gears screaming, an amazing feat.
442* Laura Branigan's cover of Music/{{Alphaville}}'s "Forever Young" modulates down a half-step to B for the guitar solo, than up a minor third from there to D for the ending chorus.
443* Before the last Chorus in ''Queen - Breakthrough'', an upwards key change occurs.
444* "Boris Johnson is a Fucking Cunt" by [[Music/KuntAndTheGang The Kunts]] modulates upwards 5 times over its brief length, starting in C and ending up in F.
445* [[Music/TrafficBand Traffic]] does one a little weird with "The Low Spark of High Heeled Boys" - the last moment of the song is a distorted organ that is playing a rather off-key chord after finishing the final bridge, while the rest of the instruments linger and fade out in Dm. It's a bit more pronounced in live versions of the song, when the band upshifts to G maj for the BigRockEnding.
446* An unusual GarageRock example (unusual both in how it's executed ''and'' being in a ThreeChordsAndTheTruth-based genre) is The Cryan' Shames and their 1966 CoverVersion of "Sugar and Spice" (originally by Music/TheSearchers). Most of the song follows the original in being in C, but for the final verse and chorus they shift it ''downward'' to B-flat, changing the song from bright and cheerful to something a little darker (like suddenly going from puppy love to obsession).
447[[/folder]]
448
449[[folder:Country Music]]
450* Some Music/JohnnyCash examples:
451** "The Night Hank Williams Came to Town" starts in E major, then before the second verse goes up to G major, where it stays for the rest of the song.
452** "The Old Account Was Settled Long Ago" is, at least in the San Quentin album version, in E♭ major for the first two verses, but modulates up to F major for the last verse and chorus.
453** "Oney" uses both the traditional semitone variation and then the minor-third version: from A♭ to A to C.
454** "I Walk the Line" goes E-A-D-A-E. By the end, he's an octave ''lower'' than he started.
455** "In the Sweet By and By" is in E♭ at the beginning, then modulates up a semitone after the second chorus.
456* "Elvira" by Music/TheOakRidgeBoys repeats the chorus several times at the end, with each repeat being a semitone higher. [[MediaNotes/VoiceTypes basso profundo]] singer Richard Sterban (who does the song's [[EpicRiff "giddyup, ba oom papa oom papa mow mow"]]) makes the key change along with everyone else, but the fact that it's in a higher key allows him to then drop it an octave.
457* "Oklahoma Swing" by Music/VinceGill and Music/RebaMcEntire starts off with Vince singing in B♭, then goes down to E♭ for Reba's verse. It remains in E♭ for the both of them, going back up to B♭ only for an instrumental break.
458* Inverted by Music/ConwayTwitty on "I'd Love to Lay You Down", where the last few repetitions of the chorus are actually much ''lower''.
459* "Sittin' on Go" by Bryan White goes from A to B at the chorus, then back down.
460* "Little Red Rodeo" by Music/CollinRaye goes up from F to G on the chorus, then back down for the verses.
461* "I Was" by Neal [=McCoy=] also goes up a whole-step for each chorus, then back down. Like "Little Red Rodeo", it was written by Phil Vassar.
462* "The Way You Love Me" by Music/FaithHill takes it a step further. The verses are in C, but the chorus modulates up to D... except for the last line, which goes up ''again'' to E before dropping back down to C.
463* "Meanwhile" by Music/GeorgeStrait starts out in D but goes up a minor third to F for the chorus. The last chorus goes up again to G, but the song ends on an E chord.
464* "Nobody Wins" by Radney Foster goes up from G to A for its final chorus.
465* Music/RascalFlatts:
466** "Summer Nights" modulates upward twice. By the end it's ''way'' too high for lead singer Gary [=LeVox=] to sing.
467** "Easy" is a particularly odd variant: the key jumps up a minor third (C♯ minor to E minor) halfway through the second verse (sung by Music/NatashaBedingfield).
468* Music/BrooksAndDunn:
469** "Only in America" goes up from E to F at the final chorus.
470** The original version of "Cowgirls Don't Cry" was in A all the way through. Later on, they re-recorded it with Music/RebaMcEntire, who goes up a fifth to E. As if the sudden jump upward isn't jarring enough (the remixed version has a dead-stop before the key change, which isn't in the original), the backing track on the Reba version sounds like it was artificially pitched up for this chorus.
471* "Love Like This" by Kennedy Rose modulates a fourth from D to G at the chorus. Blackhawk's 1994 rendition kept the interval the same, although they recorded the song in a lower key (G to C). Carlene Carter took it a step further in 1995, as her version goes from D♭ to G♭ (i.e., a half-step below the original), but modulates ''again'' to E♭ for the final solo.
472* Music/TyHerndon:
473** His and Stephanie Bentley's "Heart Half Empty" starts in E♭, jumps ''down'' to B♭ on Bentley's verse and chorus, then back up to F for the last chorus, where they sing together.
474** Also true of "In Your Face" (G to A on the last chorus) "Hands of a Working Man" (C to C♯ on the last chorus).
475* Music/KennyRogers:
476** "Islands in the Stream" starts in C for Kenny, then goes down to A♭ for Music/DollyParton's verse.
477** "The Gambler": the first verse and chorus are in E♭, the rest of the song is in E. This was lampshaded by Mike Doughty the first several times he covered the song live.
478** "He Will, She Knows" goes up from D to E at the chorus, but the last chorus goes up even further to F♯.
479* David Frizzell:
480** "You're the Reason God Made Oklahoma" starts in C for David, and goes up to D for Shelly West's verses.
481** "I'm Gonna Hire a Wino to Decorate Our Home" goes by whole-steps at each chorus: C to D to E to F♯.
482* Music/GarthBrooks:
483** The album version of "The River" has the gear shift, but he omits it when he does it live.
484** "Squeeze Me In" starts in C, but modulates up to D when Music/TrishaYearwood does the second verse.
485** "Nobody Gets Off in This Town" goes up a semitone for the third verse, then goes up another for the last one.
486* Leon Ashley's "Laura (What's He Got That I Ain't Got)" transposes upward as the tone of the song becomes somewhat darker.
487* Several Music/RebaMcEntire songs:
488** "The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter" by does its half-step modulation halfway through the last chorus.
489** "Is There Life Out There" does the gear change, then goes through an instrumental bridge between that chorus and the last chorus. (The bridge is usually omitted in radio airplay.)
490** "The Night the Lights Went Out in Georgia", goes from C Dorian on the verses to G major on the choruses.
491** "We're So Good Together": The intro is in G, but it drops to E before going back up to G at the chorus and back down again.
492* Music/RandyTravis' "1982" goes from A to B before the second verse.
493* Music/AlanJackson's "Remember When" begins in G, goes down to C for a solo, then goes back up to A for the last verses.
494* Music/TravisTritt and Lari White's "Helping Me Get Over You" starts in F for Travis, then goes down to B♭ for Lari.
495* Bobby Bare's "500 Miles Away from Home" drops down from G to D halfway through.
496* "Are Your Eyes Still Blue" by Shane [=McAnally=] goes up a whole-step at each chorus, shifting from F to G to A to B.
497* The pop remix of "Amazed" by Music/{{Lonestar}} had one dubbed into the final chorus, while the original country mix did not. Two years later, the band re-recorded "Tell Her" for the single release, adding a last-chorus gear change not found in the album version.
498* "Take Me" by Lari White goes up and down a lot. The song's verses in E Major, but the choruses drop down to C♯. It then goes up to F♯ for the bridge, and the final chorus is in E♭.
499* Music/TobyKeith:
500** "Lost You Anyway" goes from D to E at the first chorus, and again to F♯ on the second chorus.
501** "Red Solo Cup" goes from A to B on the last chorus.
502* Rodney Atkins:
503** "In a Heartbeat" shifts from F to C at the chorus, then back down again.
504** "It's America" starts out in A, then moves up to B halfway through the next-to-last chorus before repeating the chorus in the higher key.
505* "Love Story" by Music/TaylorSwift shifts from D to E major halfway through the next-to-last chorus
506* Music/ClayWalker:
507** "What's It to You" does half of the next-to-last chorus in the original key of D, goes up a half-step to E♭ halfway through, then repeats the chorus in the higher key.
508** "If I Could Make a Living" shifts from F to G at the next-to-last chorus, then shifts up ''again'' to A for the last one.
509* Songwriter Dennis Linde was fond of this:
510** "John Deere Green" by Music/JoeDiffie shifts from G to A at the last chorus.
511** "The Talkin' Song Repair Blues" by Music/AlanJackson goes up a half-step before each new verse (D to E♭ to E)
512** "Ten Pound Hammer" by Music/AaronTippin (A to B♭ at the third verse)
513** "Bubba Shot the Jukebox" by Music/MarkChesnutt also goes up a half-step for each successive verse (G to A♭ to A), and then ''another'' half-step to B♭ for the last two bars.
514** "Heaven Bound (I'm Ready)" by Music/{{Shenandoah}} shifts from B♭ to B halfway through.
515* The Jeannie C. Riley song "Harper Valley PTA" does this twice as the story the song tells progresses. Written by Music/TomTHall, who loved the "mid-song key change to emphasize a plot twist" trope. Examples from his discography include "Homecoming" (in the verse where we learn that the narrator missed his mother's funeral) and "Salute to a Switchblade" (when a character pulls out a knife).
516* "Lucky 4 You (Tonight I'm Just Me)" by [=SHeDAISY=] goes up from E to G at the chorus.
517* "Let's Fight" by Thompson Square: Kiefer Thompson sings the first verse in C, but the song jumps up a fifth to G for Shawna Thompson on the second verse. It then stays in G when they trade off for the rest of the song.
518* "Vidalia" by Music/SammyKershaw shifts from A to B at the last verse.
519* "Change" by Sons of the Desert inverts this, as the song shifts down from G to F at the last chorus.
520[[/folder]]
521
522[[folder:Theatre]]
523* In ''Theatre/{{Amaluna}}'', "O Ma Ley" has a key change near the very end. The show version also starts a key lower than the soundtrack version, which lacks the gear change. The soundtrack version of "Run" changes by a major third.
524* "I Met A Girl" from ''Theatre/BellsAreRinging'' modulates up half a step when the chorus comes in at the end of the refrain. More modulations follow, but the final key is a half step ''lower'' than the starting key because the song was written for an actor without a strong singing voice.
525* In Music/AaronCopland's ballet music for ''Billy the Kid'', the final scene, "The Open Prairie Again," [[BookEnds repeats the music of the introduction]] but modulates up a major third for the last repetition of the opening theme.
526* "Sing for Your Supper" from ''The Boys from Syracuse'', after modulating down from G-major to C to keep the second chorus within contralto range, shifts up to D♭ to begin the third and final chorus, then up again to D just eight bars later.
527* ''Theatre/{{Cabaret}}'' does this in several of its songs: "Willkommen" ("Wir sagen..."), "So What?", "Cabaret," even the rather dour "Meeskite."
528* "Someone Else's Story" from ''Theatre/{{Chess}}'' modulates upward at the end of the bridge.
529* "Mr. Cellophane" from "Theatre/{{Chicago}}" features one on the final repetition of the chorus.
530* ''Theatre/{{Dreamgirls}}'' does this with the R&B ballad-style songs "I Want You, Baby" and "I Am Changing."
531* "Maniac" from ''Film/{{Flashdance}}'' didn't originally have a key change, but the ScreenToStageAdaptation adds one.
532* In ''Theatre/{{Follies}}'':
533** "I'm Still Here" modulates up a half-step at the end of the last bridge with a brass flourish.
534** "Losing My Mind" ascends to B major from its original key of A♭ major, the modulation being accompanied by a sweeping crescendo.
535* "Don't Rain On My Parade" from ''Theatre/FunnyGirl'' modulates up a whole tone just before the final cadence.
536* In ''Theatre/{{Godspell}}'', "We Beseech Thee" goes up a whole tone after the "boom chick" interlude.
537* ''Theatre/GuysAndDolls'':
538** "Adelaide's Lament" modulates up a semitone for the third part ("And furthermore..."). This was added to the show sometime after the original cast album had been recorded.
539** "A Bushel and a Peck" goes up a semitone at the second chorus.
540** "Luck Be a Lady" subverts this, being an AABA song where the second A section (but not the third) is a semitone higher.
541* "Say No To This" from ''Theatre/{{Hamilton}}'' jumps up two semitones from A major to B major as Alex gets it on with Maria.
542* In ''Theatre/LaCageAuxFolles'':
543** "With Anne on My Arm" starts in C, goes up to D♭ as Anne enters, then up to D, then back to D♭ after Anne exits.
544** "I Am What I Am" starts in A and modulates upward through B and C in successive verses until finishing in D♭, building in volume and energy with each new key.
545* ''Theatre/LesMiserables'' actually has a couple of songs that have key changes. "I Dreamed a Dream" happens to be all over the place - the main verses are in E♭, the bridges are in a minor key, and the last part is in F major. "Stars" is in E until the last verse, which is in G major. "At the End of the Day" has F minor and F major parts.
546* In ''Theatre/LilAbner'', "Jubilation T. Cornpone" begins in B♭ major, then modulates to B major between verses. For the final verse (excluding encore), it modulates up another half step to C major.
547* In ''Theatre/ALittleNightMusic'', "A Weekend in the Country" abruptly jumps up from F to G for the final refrain, and after the bridge takes it up one half step more to A♭.
548* In ''Theatre/ManOfLaMancha'', the final reprise of "The Impossible Dream" has a double dose of this, modulating from E♭ to E to F.
549* "The Lambeth Walk" from ''Me & My Girl'' changes keys for every one of its [[EndingFatigue fatiguing]] repetitions.
550* ''Theatre/MerrilyWeRollAlong'':
551** "Old Friends" was originally written to have the last chorus ("Two old friends") sung a minor third higher. The original cast recording subverts this and ends the song in the original key.
552** "Opening Doors" starts out in G major, but shifts up to A major and then B major for the final two choruses. Frank also starts shifting "Who Wants To Live In New York?" to higher keys when Beth auditions the song.
553* ''Milk and Honey'' does this most of all with "This Is Yesterday," where each refrain sung by Ruth is a half step higher than the last (and the final choral refrain a few steps higher).
554* "Lida Rose/Will I Ever Tell You" from ''Theatre/TheMusicMan''. The School Board haltingly sings "Lida Rose" in ACappella harmony, making it sound improvised, then they end by going up a half-tone for Marian's "Will I Ever Tell You," then the two (out of 76) trombones hit the counterpoint.
555* The DreamSequence [[SillyLoveSongs Love Song]] "I'd Rather Be Sailing" from the William Finn musical ''Theatre/ANewBrain'' features as straight an example of this trope as you can get.
556* "Song of Love" from ''Theatre/OnceUponAMattress'' modulates up a semitone at the beginning of every verse after the first one.
557* In ''Theatre/PaintYourWagon'', "There's A Coach Comin' In" modulates from D to E♭ to F, and the ensemble reprise of "Wand'rin' Star" takes the key up from E♭ to F for its last half-chorus.
558* ''Theatre/{{Shucked}}'': Lampshaded at the end of "Independently Owned", with Lulu singing about being "independently owned, and modulated" just before the song goes up in key.
559* In ''Theatre/TheSoundOfMusic'', both "The Lonely Goatherd" and "Climb Ev'ry Mountain" repeat a half step higher at the end. "My Favorite Things" repeats its last section a whole step higher, though this key change didn't make it into the movie.
560* In ''Theatre/TheUnsinkableMollyBrown'', every successive chorus and verse of "Keep-a-Hoppin'" is a half step higher than the last.
561* Most songs in ''Vanities: The Musical'' have at least one gear change. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KOeQASqFmQI "I Don't Wanna Miss a Thing"]] shifts up a step in the middle of the bridge, then up a half-step afterwards. "Setting Your Sights (Reflections)" goes from F to G (again mid-bridge), then down a minor third to E. "I Can't Imagine" goes up a step at the second verse and up another step in the usual place at the last chorus. The CutSong [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7h8CH8AAE2w "We're Gonna Be Okay"]] shifts a step ''down'' at the second verse, along with a standard last chorus half-step up key change.
562* "No One Mourns The Wicked" from ''Theatre/{{Wicked}}'' goes up a minor third to G, then back down to E at the very end. More typical examples are "What Is This Feeling" and "Wonderful," both of which shift keys from F to G for the last chorus, and "One Short Day" which goes up from F♯ to G (though with a change in beat for the "Wizomania" counterpoint).
563** It also appears in "Defying Gravity". Elphie gets a three-bar phrase repeated four times to allow her to get into the fly rig. It goes up a tone beginning with the third repeat, and the rest of the song continues in that key.
564* ''Theatre/{{Matilda}}'':
565** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gyjo-4V_NZI "Miracle"]] ascends two semitones from the Doctor's last verse to the final chorus, then drops down a major third for Matilda's ending verse.
566** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JHEBTRN1Oao "School Song"]] changes up a half step at the 2:30 mark.
567** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LAYMBz-TEZw "Loud"]] shifts up a grand total of ''four'' times, twice before the instrumental and twice after, ending up a fourth higher than its starting key.
568** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lfQei64oOuc "My House"]] modulates from B♭ to C during the counterpoint reprise of "I'm Here" near the end.
569** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=96gJhwCiG7A "Revolting Children"]] upshifts a whole step from E minor to F♯ minor for its finale.
570* "Three Friends" from ''Theatre/CloserThanEver'' has its first chorus in G, its second chorus in A♭ and its third in A. The singers don't skip a beat during the modulations, though the words they sing may be "One year later" or "Ten years later."
571* In the ScreenToStageAdaptation of ''Theatre/TheLittleMermaid'':
572** The final chorus of "She's In Love" shifts down a minor third.
573** "Her Voice" modulates by a whole tone at its finale, though only in the revised production and not the original Broadway version or its cast album.
574** "Beyond My Wildest Dreams" shifts down a step for the LastChorusSlowdown.
575** "One Step Closer" is the most complicated example, shifting up a minor third from G to B♭ at the second verse, then goes back to G during the instrumental reprise of "Beyond My Wildest Dreams" before returning to B♭, then dropping to A for its LastChorusSlowdown.
576** "If Only (Quartet)" modulates up a semitone twice, first for Sebastian's and Triton's verses, then again for its {{Massive Multiplayer Ensemble| Number}} [[ClimacticMusic climax]].
577** The final TriumphantReprise of "Part of Your World" shifts down a minor third from A major to F♯ major between the bridge and chorus sections.
578* ''Theatre/TheProm'':
579** The final chorus of "Dance With You" goes up a semitone from C♯ to D.
580** "The Acceptance Song" modulates up a minor third from F to A♭ at the second phrase of the chorus, temporarily dropping back for the second verse, then shifts up a semitone to A for the ending.
581** "Tonight Belongs To You" downshifts a major third to A♭ with its SongStyleShift to rock at the third verse, goes back up to C for the bridge, then returns to A♭ for the disco finale.
582** "Unruly Heart"'s finale modulates up a whole tone from B♭ to C.
583[[/folder]]
584
585[[folder:Video Games]]
586* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MA7DgTUKVE4&feature=player_detailpage#t=272s "Asterix" for the NES]] makes happy use of this trope, giving the already upbeat and cheerful tune in the first three "Gaul" levels an extra punch after its first loop.
587* ''VideoGame/BattleGaregga'': [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u7OyPCYSfLg&playnext=1&list=PLBEB88438F8C9F842&index=15 Stage 7's theme]] shifts up a semitone every time it "loops" (it increases indefinitely [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-NS8jaW1iIc if you listen to it in the sound test]]).
588* A ''VideoGame/DonkeyKongCountry'' [[UnlicensedGame bootleg]] for Platform/SegaGenesis called ''Super Donkey Kong '99'' includes two re-arranged songs from ''VideoGame/SuperMarioAllStars'' on its soundtrack that uses this technique. The first level uses [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X7KeDbDHAhE this song]], that is considered very annoying and ridiculously catchy as [[MinisculeRocking how short this song is]] and [[SoundtrackDissonance how it is unfitting to the game's level]].
589* ''VideoGame/{{Furi}}'': "[[https://youtu.be/lpbJJmOJLz8 Something Memorable]]" by [=Kn1ght=] modulates up a semitone twice, from E minor to F minor to F♯ minor.
590* ''VideoGame/{{Gradius}} III'': "Underground"(Stage 3b) upshifts by a semitone twice before dropping back down to loop.
591* ''VideoGame/HollowKnight'': The City of Tears theme shifts down a minor third in the last section of its loop, though only in-game and not on the OST.
592* A handful of tracks from ''VideoGame/JumpingFlash'' transpose up a semitone at certain points, e.g. the [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cM9cveNcDP8 first level]] and the [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zTuiejp70kM last level]].
593* ''VideoGame/KirbysEpicYarn'': [[http://youtu.be/3aBQAHxPsqc Fangora's theme]] consists of a short phrase that shifts up a semitone every cycle before dropping back down. Oh, and every other period has a kickass piano slide. The drop down so that it can repeat is really subtle, as well.
594* ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaALinkToThePast'': The [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8JU0C_l4aac ending music]] goes up a perfect fourth from C to F.
595* In ''VideoGame/LeisureSuitLarry5PassionatePattiDoesALittleUndercoverWork'', Michelle Milken's theme shifts up a step when she and Larry get down to business.
596* The ''VideoGame/{{Lemmings}} arrangements of [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vKG-fRS-7uM "Dance of the Reed Pipes"]] and [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hTg5Ie2_jiA "London Bridge"]] change gears by a semitone and whole tone, respectively. The original music track [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uxubCD6ILeg "Tim 2"]] shifts up either a semitone or whole tone depending on the game version.
597* The boss theme from ''Looney Tunes Collector: Alert!'' starts in E-flat and increases by one semitone every loop until it reaches G, at which point it returns to E-flat.
598* ''VideoGame/MarbleMadness'': The Silly Race music periodically increases in pitch by a half-step.
599* ''VideoGame/MedalOfHonorFrontline'': [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TRAnjj43L_w Manor House Rally]] shifts up a minor third; this section happens to be the second version of the VariableMix in-game. Better yet, [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-cNGFZQKSxs The Halftrack Chase]] moves up a step three times.
600* ''Franchise/MegaMan'':
601** ''VideoGame/MegaMan2'': [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=689o0hdcQ5g "Wily's Castle Part 2"]] consists of a 4-bar phrase that shifts up a semitone every cycle, and drops back down after going up a full octave.
602** From ''VideoGame/MegaMan4'', Bright Man's theme goes up a full step after the first twenty seconds.
603** Inverted in ''VideoGame/Rockman4MinusInfinity''. When a Robot Master TurnsRed, the music [[SongsInTheKeyOfPanic speeds up]] and shifts ''down'' from C to B.
604* The first theme of "Tallon Overworld" in ''VideoGame/MetroidPrime'' uses this; it starts off in the key of G Mixolydian[[note]]A Mixolydian scale is simply a Major scale with a lowered seventh note, so in G Mixolydian, the F# at the end would be changed to a neutral F[[/note]] with no clear melody, switches to Tonicized C once the melody starts to kick in, switches to F Mixolydian soon after, and the second half of the song switches and climaxes in B♭ Mixolydian.
605* In ''VideoGame/OriAndTheWillOfTheWisps'', the FinalBoss music modulates up a semitone in the second half of the battle, which is also where the ThemeMusicPowerUp kicks in.
606* ''VideoGame/PokemonRubyAndSapphire'': Unusually for a BGM track, [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F9OeI7KfeBo Slateport City's theme]] has this mark the end of its loop. At first, it sounds like it's looping back to its opening notes at the 40 s mark, but 20 seconds later, it diverges into a bridge section that leads to a full tone higher rendition of its opening notes before looping back to the lower tone.
607* At the end of ''VideoGame/QuestForGloryII'', the background music shifts up from D minor to F minor as you enter the Emir's palace through the front gate.
608* ''VideoGame/SanFranciscoRush'' implements this rather poorly in several songs. For example, "Blue Fog" and "Rave Rush", which begin with a single song and then repeat the ''exact same song'' a semitone higher.
609* Various level themes from ''VideoGame/SonicRoboBlast2'' include this, mostly in the multiplayer levels. Examples include "Aerial Garden Zone", the Speed Shoes theme, among others.
610* ''Franchise/{{Splatoon}}'':
611** The single-player levels (boss fights excluded) step up their music a pitch when you get to the final checkpoint.
612** In ''VideoGame/Splatoon2'', the rendition of "Tidal Rush" used during the second phase begins in A minor but soon modulates up a whole tone to B minor. [[spoiler:This is definitely [[IKnowYoureInThereSomewhereFight definitely for emotional effect]].]]
613* ''Franchise/SuperMarioBros'':
614** The ending music to several entries: ''VideoGame/SuperMarioBrosTheLostLevels'' goes from C to F, ''VideoGame/SuperMarioWorld'' goes from C to C♯, ''VideoGame/SuperMario64'' also goes from C to C♯, the list goes on.
615** The full version of the main theme of ''VideoGame/SuperMarioOdyssey'', "Jump Up, Super Star!" modulates from E♭ Major (already a full minor third higher than the verses) up to E major for one last chorus, though the coda modulates still further and ends up in D♭.
616** The credits music to ''VideoGame/YoshisIsland'' also starts in C, but shakes things up a little by modulating up to E♭ before it drops down and ends on C♯.
617** When bosses in ''VideoGame/SuperMarioGalaxy'' reach their last HP, the music restarts a half step higher.
618** In every ''VideoGame/MarioKart'' game since ''VideoGame/MarioKartDoubleDash'', the music goes up half a step when you are on your last lap. Baby Park from ''Double Dash!!'', when ported to ''VideoGame/MarioKart8'' in a DLC pack, modulates up a half step ''per every lap''.
619* ''VideoGame/SuperSmashBrosUltimate'': The main theme, "Lifelight", has its last verse a semitone higher in pitch.
620* ''Franchise/TouhouProject'' songs are full of key changes:
621** An exemplary example would be ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SdvYffA9BdY Scarlet Symphony ~ Scarlet Phoneme]]'', the theme song of Kurumi from PC-98-exclusive ''VideoGame/TouhouGensokyoLotusLandStory'', which is ''nothing but'' key changes on a fourteen-second motif.
622** The finale of "Land of Dreams", the Eurobeat arrange of "Angel's Legend" from ''VideoGame/TouhouReiidenHighlyResponsiveToPrayers'', shifts up three times as it fades out. The original just shifted up one semitone for the second repetition of the melody, then reverted back to the initial key as it looped.
623** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xy_-7OXophY "Solar Sect of Wisdom~Nuclear Fusion"]] simply repeats the same melody a fifth higher for the second half of its loop. The [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jCubA3oltGM Eurobeat arrangement]] by DJ Command has a double semitone key change instead.
624** "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qhlXhaS3OkU Emotional Skyscraper~Cosmic Mind]]" from ''VideoGame/TouhouSeirensenUndefinedFantasticObject'' shifts from G minor to B♭ minor halfway through the upbeat A-/section, drops to E minor for the slow B-section, then shifts back to the original key before looping.
625** "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NmlXXPVxQ3Q Wind God Girl]]" from ''VideoGame/TouhouKaeidzukaPhantasmagoriaOfFlowerView'' goes up a half-step (from F minor to F♯ minor) for the last 39 seconds before looping.
626** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vS_a8Edde8k Night of Nights]], a well-known remix of "Flowering Night" from ''Phantasmagoria of Flower View'', shifts from D minor to E♭ minor near the end of the song.
627* ''VideoGame/TransportTycoon'': "Little Red Diesel" steps up from D major to E major for the last verse.
628* ''VideoGame/{{Undertale}}'':
629** Undyne's theme consists of two nearly-identical tracks -- "NGAHHH!", which plays during her pre-battle speech; and a slightly rearranged version called "Spear of Justice" that kicks in when the actual battle starts. The latter modulates up from G minor to G♯ minor after the first few lines to let you know that shit just got real. Because it has to loop for the duration of the fight, it also has to modulate back down at some point and manages to do so in an equally dramatic fashion. Oddly enough, "NGAHHH!" started out at G♯ minor to begin with.
630** The title track, "Undertale", is a fully straight example; the one time in the game it plays, it does not loop, and with nearly a minute to go in the song, it modulates up one semitone, from A♭ major to A major, and stays that way until the end.
631* ''VideoGame/WarioLandII'': "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wuEkI2A9jX8 The Journey Home]]", the music that plays during the credits, is in C Major. Two bars into the coda, it shifts to D♭ Major.
632* In ''VideoGame/WonderBoyIIITheDragonsTrap'':
633** The second bridge section of "Sidecrawler's Dance" modulates down a whole tone. The Platform/TurboGrafx16 version, however, omits this key change.
634** "The Danger Zone" shifts up a semitone at about the halfway point.
635* ''VideoGame/WonderBoyIIIMonsterLair'': The [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bcLgIvFK0fQ boss theme]] does this, although in-game, the [[TimedMission boss timer]] expires [[LongSongShortScene before it reaches that part]]. The [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qtzu4MKR5I0 Ice World / Desert]] music also goes up a step for its second half.
636* ''VideoGame/XenobladeChronicles1'': [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xi0M9SIaLb4 "Engage the Enemy"]] is in A♭ minor for most of the piece, but modulates for the final 'chorus' up a semitone to A natural.
637* ''VideoGame/XenobladeChronicles2'':
638** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y6TLtJ4epT0 "Counterattack"]], a remix of "Engage the Enemy", modulates up from F♯ minor to G minor for the final section.
639** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zukZtQQ2hDU "Incoming!"]] modulates a tone up from D minor to E minor for the final part of the song. Funnily enough, it shifts back down to D for the last few measures.
640[[/folder]]
641
642[[folder:Web Animation]]
643* ''WebAnimation/TheAmazingDigitalCircus'': Near the end of [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H-AT42lYGBg the full theme song]], the key shifts upward, giving it a slightly manic edge that complements Pomni's mental breakdown at the end of the video.
644* ''WebAnimation/{{Kurzgesagt}}'': Among the multiple instances of modulation in the soundtrack for "The Most Horrible Parasite: Brain Eating Amoeba" (as the situation gets increasingly dire for the infected) is a semitone shift up between the "symptoms appear" and the "symptoms get serious" sections of the video.
645[[/folder]]
646
647%%[[folder:Web Videos]]
648%%* WebVideo/{{CDZA}}'s medley of key changes uses some of the examples found on this page.
649%%[[/folder]]
650
651[[folder:Western Animation]]
652* ''WesternAnimation/GIJoeTheMovie'': The opening theme goes through at least three upward tone shifts.
653* ''Franchise/MyLittlePony'':
654** ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyRescueAtMidnightCastle'': "Call Upon the Sea Ponies'' has a semitone gear change mid-bridge.
655** ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyG3'': The theme song shifts from B to D for the ThemeTuneRollCall bridge, then drops to B♭ for the ending refrain. The ThemeTuneExtended starts in B♭, and shifts up a semitone to B between the first and second verses.
656** ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic'':
657*** "[[Recap/MyLittlePonyfriendshipIsMagicS1E26TheBestNightEver The Best Night Ever]]": "At the Gala" modulates up a semitone twice, before and after Twilight's verse. "Pony Pokey", as with the original "Hokey Pokey", upshifts on every verse after the first, for a total of four times.
658*** "[[Recap/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagicS2E7MayTheBestPetWin May the Best Pet Win]]": "Find a Pet" drops down by a whole tone in the middle of the bridge.
659*** "[[Recap/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagicS2E15TheSuperSpeedyCiderSqueezy6000 The Super Speedy Cider Squeezy 6000]]": The Flim Flam Brothers' VillainSong does this at the last refrain.
660*** "[[REcap/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagicS2E18AFriendInDeed A Friend in Deed]]": Pinkie Pie's "Smile Song" moves up a semitone midway through the choral finale.
661*** "[[Recap/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagicS3E13MagicalMysteryCure Magical Mystery Cure]]": "A True, True Friend" upshifts by a semitone mid-sentence at the end of the chorus before the last verse.
662*** "[[Recap/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagicS4E8RarityTakesManehattan Rarity Takes Manehattan]]": "Generosity" goes up a full step from the bridge to the last verse.
663*** "[[Recap/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagicS4E25TwilightsKingdomPart1 Twilight's Kingdom, Part 1]]": "You'll Play Your Part" modulates up a fourth at the first chorus, then shifts up a step from there for the final chorus.
664** ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyEquestriaGirls'': "This Is Our Big Night" shifts up a step during the chorus, and the reprise shifts during the "Six friends on the way" bridge. The soundtrack version has the key change during the second bridge.
665** ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyEquestriaGirlsRainbowRocks'':
666*** The final chorus of "Battle (of the Bands)" shifts up a whole tone from C minor to D minor.
667*** The final chorus of "Welcome To The Show" also modulates up a whole step.
668*** The bridge of "Shine Like Rainbows" shifts up a fourth, then the song returns to its original key for the last chorus.
669* ''WesternAnimation/PhineasAndFerb'': The title song in "[[Recap/PhineasAndFerbSummerBelongsToYou Summer Belongs to You!]]" has several different keys for the verse, pre-chorus and chorus, but then after Ferb sings, "Bay-bee, bay-bee, bay-bee, bay-bee...", the chorus goes up a key.
670* ''WesternAnimation/BatmanTheBraveAndTheBold'': Happens in "[[MusicalEpisode Mayhem of the Music Meister!]]", with "I'm the Music Meister", "If Only", "Death Trap", and "The World Is Mine".
671%%* The end of [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SSVirz2TT6k "Giroppon"]] by Nezumi Senpai.
672%%** Made even more spectacular in a [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5PLg_QiHw1U cover]] by Music/AndrewWK
673* ''WesternAnimation/JayJayTheJetPlane'':
674** "The First Time That I See A Shooting Star" starts out in B♭, then shifts to E♭ for the second half.
675** "Breezy" shifts up a whole step after the bridge.
676** The final verse of "Super Sonic Boom" shifts up a semitone from the last chorus on.
677** "Where Does the Music Come From?" is mostly in F, but briefly shifts to E♭ then to D♭ for the second verse, then to E♭ for the final verse before modulating back to F.
678** "My Snuggly Wuggly One" suddenly shifts up one step when the final word is sung.
679** "My Rainbow World" shifts up one and a half steps, but returns to its original key for the reprise. For the album version, it does the shift for the second verse, before shifting back down for the instrumental break. Then it shifts up for the last verse.
680** "You Are Unique" is in C, but shifts to A for Snuffy's TriumphantReprise.
681** The final verse of "Going There With You" modulates up one step and a half.
682** "An Amazing Blazing Light Parade" is in C, but in the reprise, it's in B.
683** The last verse "On a Switch-Around Day" shifts up half a step.
684** "Up Is Up" shifts up a semitone toward the end of Snuffy's verse, then shifts back to its regular key from the next verse on.
685** "The Truth About Losing a Tooth" is mostly in G; as it approaches the climax it modulates down one step, then down another for the final line.
686** "A Traveling Song" modulates up two steps; once for Snuffy's verse and again for Big Jake's.
687** "Goin' to the Ocean" starts out in C, but modulates up two steps when the lyrics begin.
688** The last verse of "You Can Count On Me" shifts up one whole step.
689* "Yakko's World", the ''WesternAnimation/{{Animaniacs}}'' ListSong, shifts up a semitone after each verse, ending up a minor third higher than it started.
690** The show's theme song itself goes through ''four'' changes (A♭ to C to E♭ to G to B♭). When the show was aired in reruns on Creator/{{Nickelodeon}}, they abbreviated the intro and ''pitched up'' the part that was in A♭.
691*** A staple of Richard Stone's work; he did this with the themes for:
692*** ''WesternAnimation/{{Freakazoid}}'', which goes from B♭ minor to B minor.
693*** ''WesternAnimation/TheSylvesterAndTweetyMysteries'', which goes from C minor to D minor.
694*** ''WesternAnimation/RoadRovers'', which goes from C to E.
695* The EndingTheme of ''WesternAnimation/CountDuckula'', which also starts a key higher than the OpeningTheme.
696* The ''WesternAnimation/TinyToonAdventures'' theme song goes up from E to F for the second verse.
697* The theme song of ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987'', which goes from E major to F♯ major for the finale. The [[WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017 reboot]]'s version of the theme similarly begins in F major and shifts to G major for the climax. Launchpad's "Theme Song Takeover" version of the latter lampshades the trope in its lyrics.
698* The theme song for ''WesternAnimation/ChipNDaleRescueRangers'' does this ''three times'', starting in B♭ major, shifting into C major for the first chorus, then E♭ major for the second, and finishing off in F♯ major.
699* The theme song of ''WesternAnimation/TheNewAdventuresOfWinnieThePooh'' starts off in G major, and then shifts to A major in the final chorus.
700* ''WesternAnimation/TheRaccoons'':
701** To start, ''The Christmas Raccoons''. "Perfect Tree", "Lake Freeze", and "Shake the Sun" all start out in C major, then end in D major. The only other song "Lost Angels" is sung entirely in A major.
702** Next, ''The Raccoons On Ice''. "Takin' My Time" starts out in C major, then shifts to C♯ major after the middle eight. "To Have You" begins in G major. As it heads to the instrumental break, it shifts to A♭ major. It remains that way for another chorus. After that, the song shifts to B♭ major for one final chorus, and the ending. "Some Days" starts out in E major, then shifts to F♯ major. The whole of "You Can Do It" is in C major, then during the instrumental ending, it shifts to D major.
703** ''The Raccoons and the Lost Star'' has "Lions and Tigers" starting out in F major, and then shifts to F♯ major. "Shining" begins in F major, then the next verse goes to G major, and the pre-chorus and remaining choruses are sung in A major. "Friends" starts out in C major, shifts to D major for the second chorus, goes back to C major for the instrumental break and middle eight, and then to D major once again for the final choruses.
704** Finally, as for the series proper, "Sooner or Later" starts out in D major, then to E♭ major for the ending.
705** "All Life Long" plays in D minor for the verses and D major for the choruses, then shifts to E major at the end of the guitar solo.
706** "Growing Up" shifts from F♯ minor to G minor when it heads to the synth harmonica solo.
707** "Hold Back Tomorrow" shifts from E minor to F♯ minor for the final choruses.
708** "Stop the Clock" has the verses played in D minor, and the choruses in C minor. Once it hits the guitar solo, it shifts up to G minor. The second part of it shifts up to G♯ minor, and the final choruses played in C♯ minor.
709** "New World" starts out in F major, then shifts to G major for the guitar solo, and finally to A major for the final choruses.
710** "Come On Home" begins in B♭ major, and after the guitar solo, it shifts to B major for the final choruses.
711** "When the Sun Comes Up" has the verses sung in D minor, the pre-choruses in F major, and the choruses in G major.
712* ''WesternAnimation/AllDogsGoToHeaven'':
713** The first movie has "You Can't Keep a Good Dog Down" (D♭ major to E♭ major to D♭ major again to D major), "What's Mine is Yours" (A♭ major to B♭ major), and "Love Survives" (G major to A major).
714** The second movie has "It's Too Heavenly Here" (F major to A♭ major to F major again to A♭ major again and finally to A major) and "My Afghan Hairless" (A major to B♭ major). "On Easy Street" has the first part of each verse sung in C major, and the rest in E♭ major, then shifting to F major for the finale. "I Will Always Be with You" (both the film and credit versions) begins with E major in the first verse, then to C major for the next verse and the middle eight, and finally to E♭ major for the finale. The latter version, however, stays on E♭ major for the instrumental break and finally shifts to F♯ major for the finale.
715** The TV series has several:
716*** The theme song "A Little Heaven" begins in A major and ends in B♭ major. This is done in the first two seasons. The third and final season has a shorter variant played entirely in B major.
717*** "It's Gotta Come from the Heart" begins in F major for the first verse, then shifts to G major, and finally to A major for the finale.
718*** "Casanova" goes from D minor to E♭ minor.
719*** "Everything a Girl Wants" goes from B major to C♯ major.
720*** "The Perfect Dog" has the first verse and chorus sung in B♭ major, the second verse in C major, and the final chorus in D major.
721*** "Take the Easy Way Out" goes from C to C♯.
722*** "Sidekicks" goes from F major to F♯ major.
723*** "Why Not Be Happy" goes from G major to A♭ major.
724** ''An All Dogs Christmas Carol'' has "When We Hear a Christmas Carol" (D major to E♭ major) and "Clean Up Your Act" (E♭ major to E major). While "I Always Get Emotional at Christmas Time" is sung entirely in A♭ major, the slow reprise is sung in F major.
725* ''WesternAnimation/VeggieTales'': There's just so many songs in this long-running Christian cartoon series, here are some examples:
726** "The Eight Polish Foods of Christmas" and "I'm So Blue" shift from G major to A major.
727** "Promised Land" shifts from D major to E♭ major.
728** "The Yodeling Veterinarian of the Alps" shifts from F♯ major to G major to A♭ major.
729** "Haman's Song" shifts from E minor to F minor to F♯ minor to G minor.
730** "Larry's High Silk Hat" shifts from E major to F major.
731[[/folder]]
732
733[[folder:Other]]
734* "There's a Light", the song written by Gregory Charles for the UsefulNotes/{{Olympic|Games}} torch's relay across Canada, has a couple of gear changes.
735** "I Believe," the "anthem" of the 2010 Winter Olympics, also abuses this trope.
736* The [[https://youtu.be/DCyTijJzEwo National Aerobic Championship theme]] by Ty Parr modulates upwards from F to G, though this part is not used in the more commonly seen [[MemeticMutation viral video]].
737[[/folder]]
738
739!!Parodies, Subversions, and {{Lampshade Hanging}}s:
740[[folder:Miscellaneous]]
741* Spitting Image's "Chicken Song" is a parody of mainstream pop songs and goes higher at every chorus.
742* Probably best exemplified by "Title of the Song" by Da Vinci's Notebook (perhaps better known as "The ''A Cappella'' Act Music/PaulAndStorm Used To Be In") which actually ''[[LampshadeHanging points out that it's doing this]]'': "Modulation and I hold a high no-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-ote..."
743* Subverted in Denmark's 1982 Eurovision Song Contest Entry, "Video Video" by Brixx... the song goes into the bridge leading up to the final chorus... there is tension in the air... are we going up? - Nope, the orchestra HAMMERS THE ROOT NOTE HOME and we return to the original key, sing the last chorus and leave the stage.
744* Music/{{ACDC}}'s "Play Ball" sets one up during the guitar solo, in which the guitar's pitch rises by an octave, but then it goes back to the normal pitch.
745* The Creator/MontyPython musical ''Theatre/{{Spamalot}}'' has several variants:
746** {{Lampshaded}} by "The Song That Goes Like This", which is a dramatic ballad about everything that occurs in dramatic ballads. It starts in F major: The key change occurs upon the lyrics "And then we change the key", and the song modulates up a full step to G major. The vocalists spend the first part of the next verse complaining about the added difficulty of having to sing higher. Then the key goes up a full step to A major for the next verse, with the singers complaining about the song's seemingly endless length. For the last verse, with the song modulating a last full step to B, they are [[OhCrap swearing]] when they hear the final one coming.
747** The live version of "Always Look On The Bright Side Of Life" has the lead singer point out the key change.
748** "He is Not Yet Dead" has three key changes. The song is played in C major from the start up until Sir Robin and Sir Lancelot are singing a counterpoint duet, at which the song modulates up a semitone. The song then modulates to A for the next verse and G for the last verse.
749** "Find Your Grail" has two key changes after Arthur's lines. The version that is performed starts in E major then goes down to C major, then back up to F♯ for the final part.
750* {{Subverted}} in Motion City Soundtrack's "Fell In Love Without You": The key changes for a final repetition of the chorus, and it sounds as if the song is going to end immediately after. Instead, the song switches back to the original key and repeats the chorus one last time, giving the ending a slightly unnerving effect.
751* {{Lampshaded}} again in "Show Off," from the musical ''The Drowsy Chaperone'', a song about how much the character wants to retire from show business and stop doing everything she's doing: "Iiiiiiiiii don't wanna change KEYS no more!"
752* Occurs, complete with a [[LampshadeHanging nice lampshade attached]], in Music/MitchBenn's "Everything Sounds Like Coldplay Now", an AffectionateParody of the tropes of post-{{Britpop}} British rock as exemplified by Music/{{Coldplay}}: "And if you can ''doooo''/A high bit in the middle eight, then ''yoooou''/Have almost solved the riddle of just how/To sound like Coldplay now..."
753** Also {{Lampshaded}} in Mitch's ''West End Musical'':
754--->This is the great big opening song\
755The kind that [[Creator/AndrewLloydWebber Lloyd-Webber]] writes and arranges\
756It's actually very tricky to sing\
757It's got lots of unnecessary key changes\
758There, did you spot it? That was one there\
759We started in C, now we're in D Major...
760* Occurs in the song "Haben Sie Gehoert Das Deutsche Band?" in ''Film/TheProducers''. Franz Liebkind shouts out "Key change!" before the coda.
761** This is a ShoutOut to Creator/MelBrooks' ''High Anxiety'', where Dr. Thorndyke (played by Brooks) yells the same thing while singing the title song.
762* The infamous [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=czTksCF6X8Y "pizza theme"]] from the video game ''VideoGame/SpiderMan2'' does an [[StylisticSuck intentionally bad, fast and exaggerated pitch shifting]] to an arrangement of the traditional song "Funiculi, Funiculà" following the rhythm of the minigame featured on it.
763* Occurs in the song "Two Nobodies In New York" from ''Title Of Show''. Like ''Film/TheProducers'', Hunter yells "Key change!" before the song changes keys.
764* Done in [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i5I0vwcxLwA this]] piano segment from ''Series/TheMuppetShow''. Rowlf tells Fozzie, "Modulate!" and, when met with confusion, gets him to do it by shoving him to the right.
765** Marvin Suggs, while performing "Witch Doctor", shouts the command "Modulate!" to his Muppaphones, who all comply by moving down one space so that Suggs doesn't even have to play them differently.[[note]]These were both inside jokes, since Creator/JimHenson would always shout "Modulate!" during between-take singalongs on ''Series/TheMuppetShow'' set.[[/note]]
766* Barry Manilow is so identified with this that when Music/RayStevens recorded the parody "I Need Your Help, Barry Manilow", he made sure to include it. It can also be heard ''just a few seconds'' into the Not The Nine O'Clock News parody, [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kTBrY_Uterk Wet And Lonely]].
767** Also Lampshaded in Stevens' cover of the theme from ''Music/TheMonkees'', which he performs as an Austrian singing duo, [[ActingForTwo both characters voiced by him]]. Come the key change, the characters get into an argument about going too high.
768** Stevens himself is an important figure in the history of this trope, having modulated upward in his big hit [[BlackSheepHit 1970 ballad]] "Everything is Beautiful" ''twice'' toward the end of the song, one of the first really shameless uses of this to introduce a rousing element into a sentimental song. The above-mentioned "Man in the Mirror" clearly was influenced by this song in its lyrics and arrangement.
769* Inverted in the ''Theatre/ForbiddenBroadway'' parody "I Couldn't Hit The Note", spoofing how Julie Andrews can't hit high notes anymore, the song keeps modulating [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xdQ2yq-erIY down]].
770* In the movie ''Film/BlastFromThePast'', the two main characters are listening to a Perry Como song on the car stereo, and Adam gets all excited over a slight key change towards the end.
771* {{Lampshaded}} in the WithLyrics version of the [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OyjTDiNWT0k=search#t=1m52s Final Fantasy Classic theme]] by brentalfloss:
772-->'''Lyrics:''' Shine your light, the forces of evil can't outlast a mage, a knight, a weird little kid, and a ninja master\
773KEY CHANGE, MOFO!
774** He uses the same gag again in [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yR9Y7GNAxzI Here at the Gaming Con]].
775** And {{invoked|Trope}} in his duet about [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sAtWQ_xn0kI Super Mario Land]].
776* In the Music/WeirdAlYankovic[=/=]Creator/KateWinslet(!) duet "I Need A Nap":
777-->'''Both:''' I don't want to harmonize with you\
778With me\
779'''Al:''' Change keeeeeeeeey!\
780'''Kate:''' ''Make him stop!''
781* The game show ''Series/WheelOfFortune'', between 1983 and the mid-2000s, used a theme song called "Changing Keys", a pretty obvious lampshading of this trope. The theme was remixed several times, with the last two remixes [[ArtifactTitle having few to no key changes]].
782* Me First and the Gimme Gimme's have an unintentional parody of this during their cover of "Heart of Glass." The bad modulates higher with every chorus, and eventually the lead singer has to scream into the mike to make the band stop, explaining that he can't hit a note that high. The drummer then quips back "Dude, it's only three modulations."
783* In Music/MCLars' "True Player For Real", it would be played straight, were it not for him upright announcing at the shift, [[LampshadeHanging "Key change!"]].
784* Subverted beautifully by Music/{{Placebo}} in "Bright Lights", one of their most cheerful songs, which features a very characteristic keyboard riff over the chorus. After the second chorus ends in C major, the song builds up and the riff starts in D... but D minor, it turns out after a few notes, and they never actually changed key.
785* The ''Bo Selecta'' Christmas Novelty song "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MqBF7TiyATo Proper Crimbo]]" lampshades this with the lyric [[LampshadeHanging "Can I get a key change?"]]. Bob Geldof seemed particularly amused.
786* Parodied and lampshaded in [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zp58wc1QhBo Truck Driving Song]] from the Swedish comedy show ''Macken'', where a truck driver sings about his occupation. The last words in the chorus translates to "And if the song gets too boring, then I keep it cool. I change the key and shift it half a step", which then continues to happen throughout the song. Then he does it about ten times straight right at the end.
787* "Supernatural" by Wild Orchid has the lyric "Lift me up higher, higher and higher!" at the point of key change.
788* [[Music/TenaciousD Now it's getting hairy, so we're changin' the key/Never underestimate, the power of D!]]
789* "Map Ref. 41ºN 93ºW" by Music/{{Wire}} [[LampshadeHanging hangs a lampshade on this]] by announcing the dramatic chord change from the verse to the chorus with Colin Newman shouting, [[NarmCharm "CHORUS!"]] Also, "Being Sucked In Again", in which the entire verse part is made up of dramatic chord changes, and "Indirect Enquiries", where it's ''[[RefugeInAudacity the whole freaking song]]''.
790* Exaggerated - In ''Britain's Got The Pop Factor and Possibly a New Celebrity Jesus Christ Soapstar Superstar Strictly on Ice'', the deliberately cringeworthy "The Winner's Song" does this, and then does it ''again'' two measures later.
791** Parody of how Creator/SimonCowell always puts in a Key Change into songs, particularly ''Series/TheXFactor'' winning songs.
792* Subverted by the Kaiser Chiefs in "I Predict A Riot" and in various other songs. Towards the end of the song, they start shouting in a gradually rising pitch, as if building up to a modulation, but instead they remain in the same key.
793* Inverted and then played straight in the [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UKU7r7i1L9s&feature=related theme song]] of The Half Broken Music Box: The song's verse is in C major, but it unexpectedly shifts ''down'' to B major to start the refrain. Then for the second sentence of the refrain, it shifts ''back up'' to the original key of C major.
794* Wild Cherry's "Play That Funky Music" indulges in a cry of "Gonna take it higher now!" and proceeds to shift up one semitone with all the finesse the trope name implies.
795* Music/KylieMinogue's "Your Disco Needs You". The song plays it straight at first by going up in the lead up to the final chorus. Once "Cure a lonely heart" is reached (where the title of the song is sung repeatedly), the song returns back to the original key.
796* "I Just Had Sex", by Music/TheLonelyIsland and featuring Akon, features an upshift towards its conclusion, as everyone joins in.
797* In ''WesternAnimation/TheBraveLittleToaster'', many of the songs include an instance of this. Most notably is near the end of "Like a B-Movie". This bit is even amplified on the soundtrack version. It hurts a little.
798* Played with in a tiny piano piece by Leoš Janáček called [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KVwG8OCoS2s ''Cekám Te!'']] (Czech: ''I Am Waiting For You!'') which consists of four four-bar phrases, arranged in a song-like AABA form. The piece is entirely in A major until the last two bars, which abruptly shift to D♭. However, instead of going on to play the A section again in the new key, the piece just stops abruptly (on the dominant chord!) -- hence the title: it's "waiting for" a phrase in the new key which will never come.
799* ''WesternAnimation/TheAristocats'' [[LampshadeHanging lampshades]] this in "Ev'rybody Wants to Be a Cat", which says, "Let's take this to another key, modulate, and wait for me..."
800* Axis of Awesome's "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L2cfxv8Pq-Q How To Write A Love Song]]", which dissects generic '90s R&B love songs, naturally includes a couple of gratuitous key changes, and accompanying lyrics explaining their role in the song.
801-->"When you change the key in a love song/It means you're singing passionately."
802* Markoolio and Linda Bengtzing's "Värsta Schlagern" lampshades the hell out of every single music cliché to ever plague the Series/EurovisionSongContest, including this one ("Här kommer höjningen till slut!"[[note]]"here comes the upward shift at last"[[/note]]) as they go into the final chorus.
803* Music/BreakingBenjamin's "Forget It" is made of this trope; starting at E♭, the verse structure shifts up a semitone with each verse until it winds up at an A♭ for the last verse.
804* Music/LacunaCoil's "Fragments of Faith" zig-zags the hell out of this trope - the home key is G♯ minor, but pre-choruses are in A minor and both the first chorus and the first half of the second chorus is in F♯ minor. The "offending" gear change during the second chorus is actually a return to the original key.
805* ''VideoGame/TheIdolmaster'' has a lot of music so having a lot of examples of this trope is not a surprise (starting with "Positive!"). There are, however, a couple of examples where the key goes down before the last chorus then comes back up to the original key, such as "Nemurihime".
806* Tommy Roe's "Dizzy" probably holds the record for most key changes in a pop song -- in less than three minutes of running time, it switches between D major, E major, F major and G major a total of ''11 times.''
807* In Marshall Crenshaw's "Monday Morning Rock," he shouts, "Ohhh... key change!" just before the guitar solo.
808* [[http://www.fellowshipthemusical.com Fellowship!]] TheMusical parody of ''Literature/TheLordOfTheRings: The Fellowship Of The Ring'' has "The Lament of the Ring", which does this for ''visual'' comedy: each time Frodo changes to a higher key, he correspondingly stands up higher to prevent Boromir from taking the ring - while Boromir starts singing about how the key is getting too high for him to sing comfortably. Eventually Frodo is standing on tiptoes on a chair, and singing in falsetto.
809* The ''VideoGame/SuperMarioGalaxy'' remix of the ''VideoGame/SuperMarioBros1'' main theme features this.
810* Subverted in the Manhattans' "Shining Star"; after the first chorus the song goes up from B Major to C Major on "loooooone", but goes back down to B Major on "ly". This is played straight later on.
811* Inverted in "Tonight" from ''Theatre/WestSideStory'', which moves down from B♭ to A to A♭ with each successive chorus so the actors playing Tony and Maria don't have to worry about singing the calm and quiet ending in a high key.
812* Lampshaded in "I Believe In God" from Music/LeonardBernstein's ''Mass'', as the song reaches its climax:
813-->''(In G major--fortissimo)''\
814I believe in F♯.\
815I believe in G.\
816But does it mean a thing to you,\
817Or should I change my key?\
818''(In A♭ major--still louder)''\
819How do you like A♭?\
820Do you believe in C?
821* The Tornados' instrumental "Telstar" shifts from A Major to D Major after the bridge.
822* The ''Music/{{Megadeth}}'' song "A Tout Le Monde" subverts this. The song is played in F-minor, briefly shifts to G-minor for its final verse but then returns to F-minor for the final chorus.
823* Another metal subversion: "Liar" by ''Music/{{Helloween}}''. The song's verses are played in A♭ minor, while its chorus is played in E♭ minor. Two lines from the final rendition of the chorus, however, are played in E minor. The chorus returns to E♭ minor for its other two lines, and then the song ends in A♭ minor.
824* Music/PDQBach's "Song to Celia" (a parody of Ben Johnson's eponymous poem and the song based on it, "Drink to Me Only with Thine Eyes"), has a none-too-steady chorus attempting modulations in various places and picking fights over the key with the accompanist. The last verse modulates 6 times, 4 of them on a single syllable, and the last 2 painfully scooped down and up.
825* Some of the music Music/GiorgioMoroder composed for ''Film/AmericanGigolo'', including a part of the title song "Call Me" by Music/{{Blondie|Band}}, is made so that it sounds like shifting one note up at every repetition. It doesn't: the motif ends one note lower than it starts.
826* Punk band Tijuana Sweetheart lampshaded this in their song ''Tattooed Women'' by shouting "KEY CHANGE!"
827* ''Theatre/TheLastFiveYears'': Composer JasonRobertBrown plays the trope straight a couple of times in the musical--several key changes in a row towards the end of "Movin' Too Fast," the finale "Goodbye Until Tomorrow"--but subverts it in "Nobody Needs To Know." The song is in A♭ for its entirety up until the last six measures, when it modulates ''down'' a half-step into G major. This happens over the very last note that Jamie (the character) sings, meaning that he completely misses the note the audience was expecting to hear.
828* The Kinsey Sicks incorrectly call it a modulation in their version of "The Rose" which takes place at the final major key change.
829* In Pippa Evans's parody of a typical Eurovision song on ''Radio/TheNowShow'', she also yells "KEY CHANGE!" halfway through.
830* Music/TracyLawrence's "Paint Me a Birmingham" goes from G♭ major to A♭ major in the last chorus. When Music/CledusTJudd parodied it as "Bake Me a Country Ham", he pitch-shifted his voice on the key change to make himself sound even more like Lawrence.
831* "Annie 3" from ''Howard Crabtree's When Pigs Fly'' has a LastChorusSlowDown accompanied by the typical modulation following the line, "And reach that unreachable note!"
832* "She Is My Sin" by ''Music/{{Nightwish|Band}}'' starts in C, then ''drops'' down to A and stays there for the rest of the song, only moving back up to C in the final chorus.
833* "Bruiseology" by The Waitresses (of "I Know What Boys Like" fame) has numerous increasing key changes at the end of the song until it fades to silence.
834* "Ka Huila Wai" by Israel Kamakawiwo'ole is mostly in A but shifts up to C in the final stanza, which then repeats in D.
835* Creator/StanFreberg's parody version of "The World Is Waiting For The Sunrise" ends with the music getting higher and higher and faster and faster until [[EverythingExplodesEnding the equipment explodes]].
836* In "Feeling Grove-y" from the ''Series/JohnnyAndTheSprites'' story "The Sprites Sleep Over," the titular Sprites sing about how the couldn't possibly get to sleep unless they're back in Grotto's Grove, culminating with "Oh, how I wish I was there now... (''going up a key'') right now!", leading Johnny (who already wishes the Sprites would just ''go to sleep'') to lament, "Oh no, not a key change!"
837* Music/TomLehrer takes this to deliberately ridiculous extremes in "We Will All Go Together When We Go," on ''Music/AnEveningWastedWithTomLehrer'', which changes keys after half of its ''verses'', getting into some very silly keys in the process.
838* Bo Burnham did one of these in a song that pokes fun at the country music genre. Towards the end of the song he says [[https://youtu.be/uTUP4ET2IE0?t=3m16s "Y'all dumb motherfuckers want a key change?"]]
839** Also invoked in the hip hop parody "Oh, Bo" from his album "Words Words Words"
840* [[LampshadeHanging Lampshaded]] in ''Theatre/{{Hamilton}}'' during Farmer Refuted. The third repetition of Seabury's verse modulates up a semitone. As Hamilton makes his own comments, Seabury is just repeating the same thing, and Hamilton says "Don't modulate the key then not debate with me!"
841* Music/{{Erasure}}'s "Run To The Sun" modulates its last prechorus from C to D, only for the chorus proper to drop back to C.
842* Exposé's "Come and Go With me" upshifts from E minor to F minor at the bridge, but shifts back for the final chorus.
843* "God Laughs" by Willie Nile {{Lampshade|Hanging}}s this:
844-->''"God knows your tune and changes keys"''
845* Subverted in Music/BobSeger's "Chances Are". The first and final verses are in B♭, the middle drops down to A (for Music/MartinaMcBride's verses).
846* Going by the StudioChatter, this is {{Invoked}} in Anthem Lights' "Love You Like the Movies."
847-->"Key change?" "Nah, I don't want to." "I feel like we should do a key change." "Ok." ''I'll grab your hand, ask you to dance...''
848* Music/GarfunkelAndOates change keys twice towards the end of "What's Gonna Happen to Chris?" by stopping and adjusting the capos on their instruments.
849* "Love, Love, Peace, Peace", the interval act from the 2016 ''Series/EurovisionSongContest'', while parodying ''everything else'' that makes a good Eurovision act, slots in a key change reference just before the fake snow (and the burning fake piano).
850* [[ExaggeratedTrope Exaggerated]] in [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t03Nh0hyBY4 "Eisgekühlter Bommerlunder"]] by Music/DieTotenHosen. It steps up a half-tone ''and'' gets more speed ''twice'' in each verse (which is always the same eight lines of lyrics and very pointless), as in every eight bars, until the truck crashes against physical barriers. The song goes through ''way'' more than an octave worth of key changes. Near the end, the tape is sped up on top of even more gear changes.
851* In ''WebVideo/{{Caddicarus}}'', after getting blackout drunk to deal with having to play ''Rascal'', Caddy changes the channel to [=MrCaddyPasta=] and makes up his own [[Website/SCPFoundation SCP]] which is a music box that plays Livin' on a Prayer by Bon Jovi in full CD quality but kills everyone around it with lasers upon reaching the key change [[TakeThat because of how awful it is.]]
852* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Da4V5vKcGl8 "Hit Song to Save the World"]] by Kollektivet invokes this as part of its broader parody of overproduced pop songs:
853-->Can we modulate this?\
854''Of course we can fucking modulate this!''
855* Music/TimMinchin's "Three Minute Song" {{lampshade|s}} this: "I need a little happy clappy country song / Nice and repetitive, but not too long / Boring enough, but not too boring, with a key change here to prevent the snoring"
856* In ''Series/TheGoesWrongShow'' episode "The Spirit of Christmas", one of the characters sings a song from the perspective of a little girl writing a letter to Santa in which, due to an off-stage error, the song changes pitch almost immediately... and then ''keeps on doing it'', until it reaches the point where she's practically screeching every single line apparently in pain. Ironically, according to backstage information the actress in question (Bryony Corrigan) apparently has incredible vocal range, meaning that the producers had to really ramp up the pitch in order to get the desired effect.
857* Zigzagged in Sally Shapiro's "Christmas Escape", which shifts down a whole tone for the second verse and chorus, but modulates back up for the finale.
858[[/folder]]

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