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What is a metronome?

Metronome Beats works like a traditional metronome, playing a regular beat in time to a given tempo. Tempo is measured in terms of Beats per Minute (BPM).

Although this metronome has primarily been designed to help musicians keep time when practising and playing, you can also use it for other activities including:

1. Running - Improve your stride technique by running in time to the metronome

2. Golf - Use Metronome Beats in your practice sessions to ensure you have an even golf swing

3. Practicing breathing techniques

Metronome Settings

Are you a musician? To use a metronome you need to know three things about your piece of music:

1. How many beats per minute (BPM) are there?

2. What does each beat represent?

3. How many beats are there per bar?

Simple time signatures

A lot of music is written in a time signature where each beat represents a crotchet (also known as a quarter note). For example:

Example A:    4/4 time signature,  crotchet=80

The 4/4 time signature means that there are four crotchet beats per bar, and the tempo indication means that there are 80 beats per minute and that each beat represents one crotchet (quarter note).  So you would input 80 BPM and 4 beats per bar into the metronome. If you want to hear the metronome play crotchets then you would input a beat subdivision of 1, for quavers (eighth notes) you input 2, and semiquavers (sixteenth notes) input 4.

More complex time signatures

Music doesn’t always have a nice and simple 4/4 time signature with each beat representing a crotchet (quarter note). Say we have two pieces of music in 6/8 with different speeds:

Example B:   6/8 and   quaver=80 (80 quaver/eighth note beats per minute)

Example C:   6/8 and  dottedcrotchet=80 (80 dotted crotchet beats per minute)

Both of these examples have a tempo of 80 beats per minute.  So for both of these you would need to input 80 BPM into the metronome.

But what does each beat represent? In Example B the beats are quavers (eighth notes).  It has a 6/8 time signature, which means that there are six quavers per bar.  So Example B has six quaver beats per bar, and you need to set the beats per bar to 6 in Metronome Beats.

In Example C the beats are dotted crotchets.  It also has a 6/8 time signature (so six quavers per bar).  A dotted crotchet lasts for three quavers, so there are two dotted crotchet beats in each bar of 6/8.  So in this case you need to set the beats per bar to 2 in Metronome Beats.

What about beat subdivisions? If you want Metronome Beats to play quavers (eighth notes), you would put a beat subdivision of 1 for Example B (as the beat is already a quaver in example B) and 3 for Example C (as there are three quavers in each dotted crotchet beat).  For semiquavers (sixteenth notes) the beat subdivisions would be 2 and 6.

Hopefully this makes sense and should be applicable to any metronome. Confusion can sometimes arise when it is assumed that the beats are always crotchets/quarter notes. With Metronome Beats we haven’t made any assumption on this so that you can put in virtually any time signature/beat combination that you want.

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