Metronomes
What is a metronome?
At its simplest, a metronome is a source of a regular pulse at any user-chosen rate.
More expensive metronomes are able to accent the first beat of the bar in a range of common time signatures.
The speed of a piece is often indicated with a tempo mark denoting the number of beats per minute.
Disadvantages
- Some novices can actually slip a whole beat on a difficult passage and not even realise
- It can sometimes de-educate one's own body clock pulse
- It can encourage a musically sterile performance
Advantages
- It can prevent "technical tenuto" - the slowing down on tough bits, often without even knowing
- It can prevent "quaver quickening" - the speeding up of the fast passages caused by tension
- It can provide constistency to a practice session
The hago MIDI Metronome
Want to try a metronome without the expense of buying one?
Here are a collection of MIDI files that you can save to your disc by right-clicking on the links below. Each plays for three minutes at the tempo
indicated.
I wanted a different speed....
- If you want a MIDI file slower than those here, use one that's double the speed you want and play against alternate clicks
- If you want a MIDI file faster than those here, use one that's half the speed and play two notes per click
Other practice ideas
- Pick a slow MIDI and play an open string against it
- Double in speed and be sure to keep in step
- Revert to slow playing
- Treble in speed and be sure to keep in step
- Revert to slow playing
- Quadruple in speed... and so on
- Try at a different metronome speed