Thursday, July 14, 2011

Achieve More with a Metronome App

By Harry Mcadams


For a music artist the metronome might be the most crucial exercise tool that you can buy. Aside from maintaining your tempo and rhythm true, when used accurately a metronome may bring an element of self-discipline and structure to your training session. There are many techniques that you can use a metronome to achieve that end.

Setting goals

Probably the most typical technique to shape your exercise session with a metronome is applying it to create tempo goals on difficult passages. The metronome provides a method for evaluate and chart your performance daily. The easiest variation on this is to get started in the complicated passage at one half tempo(or as slowly as required to play easily) and boost the tempo by one click or BPM upon each effective repetition. It may take many practice sessions to arive at your goal tempo. It's imperative that you have the discipline to stop boosting the tempo should the passage gets to be to difficult for you to execute. Revisit it again later and work it up once again from a slow tempo and you'll find you can exceed your original best. Continue doing this technique until your goal has been attained.

Another variation for this technique is to experiment with a passage a predetermined range of time in a short period appropriately just before switching the tempo up. For instance if you were to endeavor to perform a passage Half a dozen times one after the other completely, you start over from zero in case you stumble around the 4th or 5th repetition of the passage. It is a great approach to develop uniformity.

Creative practice methods

Metronomes works extremely well in non conventional ways to make it easier to improve. A great way would be to practice looking at the click on the upbeat(with silence on the down beat). This really is powerful because it internalized the process of subdivision. It's oftentimes demanding initially to invert the beat but will improve with more experience. It's best to start at a slower tempo and slowly increase it. Another variation on this that is a little less difficult would be to put the metronome on the weak beats of the measure solely. For example if the tempo is normally 120 beats every minute, set your metronome to 60 beats per minute that's half tempo. Play the piece at 120 but set the clicks on beats 2 and 4 of every measure.

Another method will be to place the metronome at a fraction to your ideal tempo and execute your piece at one beat per measure, one beat per two measures or simply slower. This may test your ability to maintain a stable tempo over longer periods of time. This requires a metronome that could possibly be programmed or play a really slow beat per measure.

These are only a small number of ways to use a metronome app to structure your exercise. You will discover of course others you can use and they can and should be adjusted to match your specified exercise style and objectives.




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