T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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442.1 | Yes, but..... | NEXUS::DICKERSON | | Tue Dec 22 1987 16:43 | 12 |
| I find a metronome invaluable AFTER I have mastered the
basic melody and rhythm of a tune and am trying to get it
up-to-speed. One of the biggest mistakes in the use of
metronomes is in trying to use them "too soon". The guy
I take lessons from insists that I use my ear and count
to master even the most complex rhythms then use the
metronome to get the speed up. It works ( even with
Latin rhythms, ya'll! )
Regards
Doug Dickerson
|
442.2 | yes and no | UHURU::LAMBERT | Skating away... | Tue Dec 22 1987 19:49 | 10 |
| I have a rhythm synthesizer built into my keyboard and use it
extensively when recording stuff. the click track is always the
first thing to go down on the tape... then i play around with
the chord progressions and leads until they sound right. adjusting
the tempo when they don't.
but when just doing finger exercises - no, then i just start slow
and do 'em until i'm going as fast as i can.
-max-
|
442.3 | | MTBLUE::BOTTOM_DAVID | She was a mommar... | Wed Dec 23 1987 07:20 | 9 |
| I use my drum machine sometimes...lately as I've been working on
some new techniques I have been doing alot of playing along with
a record type pracctice so's I can steal those licks...
Playing with a tape or record is still my fav way to practice real
time rhythm and solo playing. 'cuz if I get bored I can just reboot
myself and jam....
dave
|
442.4 | "I Love My Metronome" by Seth Thomas | AQUA::ROST | A circle's not invisible | Wed Dec 23 1987 09:04 | 26 |
|
1) Yes
2) It is a must for learning how to play at a consistent tempo.
Everybody speeds up or slows down occasionally, but using the metronome
gets you used to keeping an even speed. I always use it for scale
and arpeggio practicing; I start at slow tempos, then work my way
up until I can't keep up anymore.
I used to play bluegrass, where there is no drummer and the bass player
keeps the time. I found that working with the metronome helped
me a lot, since I couldn't count on the drummer to "feed" me the
time. This, in fact, is a common problem I have noticed with many
musicians I've jammed with; when there is no drummer, they have
problems maintaining a rhythm at an even tempo.
3) Most people I know hate them. In the case of beginners, they
often seem to think the thing is broken because *they* are speeding
up or slowing down. You have to learn to tune into that click to
use one. For practicing real songs, drum machines are a lot more
fun. Once they fall under $100, I expect the metronome business,
at least among rockers, to decrease drastically.
I don't expect to get rid of mine anytime soon.
|
442.5 | | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Wed Dec 23 1987 11:07 | 6 |
| re: .4
One thing practicing to a metronome does is make you AWARE of WHERE
you tend to speed up and slow down.
db
|
442.6 | Sure do | CLOSUS::JENSEN | | Wed Dec 23 1987 12:30 | 41 |
| >>1) Do YOU practice with a metronome?
Always. Although I differentiate between practicing and warming up - I
think the two have gotten confused in a couple of earlier notes. I don't
use anything besides a guitar when warming up. I don't listen to what I
play when warming up because it is noise and is not nearly so important as
getting loose, stretching, and becoming "aware" of the guitar. I don't
think it makes much sense to stretch in time.
>>2) What, in your opinion, is the value of practicing with a metronome,
>>if any?
Practicing is very specific. That is, I am practicing *something*. In
almost all cases, the practice can be more efficient when using a
metronome. I learn whatever I am practicing more correctly and generally
quicker when using a metronome. I disagree somewhat with an earlier note
that said they don't use a metronome when learning a new song. I do, but
only when I'm learning a song from written manuscript. My sight reading
has improved tremendously since I started doing that. Granted, a metronome
doesn't make much sense when learning a song by ear. But after learning
the song, I turn on metronome to see where I'm varying the tempo.
I think using a metronome is incredibly valuable especially when a piece of
music has a difficult fingering, or requires a complicated picking
approach. In these types of passages, I tend to redefine the rhythm (ever
so slightly) so that it *fits* the way I play - I've heard many musicians
do that. A metronome will not let me do that and so it improves my playing
by expanding my technique to handle unusual (to me) passages.
When using a metronome, I generally follow the method already outlined by
starting off slow and building up to tempo. However before increasing the
tempo, I make doubly sure that I'm playing the piece correctly at the
current tempo. Then I increase the tempo a small amount (4% - 10%) and
begin playing at the new tempo. It makes no sense to increase the tempo
too much, or too fast, because you end up trading correctness for speed
(ala kids playing Eruption at the music store). Ever notice that a
correctly-played passage sounds faster than the same passage played poorly
but at twice the speed?
steve
|
442.7 | i couldn't even give mine away to a friend | SALEM::SAWYER | i see nothing..i know it all... | Wed Dec 23 1987 13:57 | 10 |
|
1. not often any more....hardly ever in the past but a little
2. value? they don't make mistakes, they don't exploit the poor
or uneducated, they don't take drugs or drink, they never disagree
with reality, they never insult my beliefs.
3. get a drum machine.
|
442.8 | Fernando Sor Reggae | AQUA::ROST | December boys got it bad | Wed Dec 23 1987 18:00 | 8 |
|
Re: drum machines
One thing those of you who recommend using drum machines overlook
is that there are types of guitar music where drums are not normally
present.
|
442.9 | Keith Moon meets Fernando Sor!! | DISSRV::CROWLEY | ere lies David St. 'ubbins, and why not! | Thu Dec 24 1987 08:43 | 15 |
|
re .8
In that case, when playing the Sor and Tarrega Blues ;^), just
program a rim shot or something similar into the drum machine.
Of course, if thats the only type of stuff you play (it was for
me many moons ago) then a simple metronome is definately the
cheaper way out. I think a drum machine is more versatile, but
then again, it all depends on what genre(s) you play.
ralph
|
442.10 | Me too Ralph | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Thu Dec 24 1987 09:56 | 7 |
| re: .8, .9
For as long as I've owned my drum machine, pattern #1 (what the
unit is set to when you power it up) has been a 1 bar 4/4 pattern
with 4 rim shots, the first of which is accented (higher velocity).
db
|
442.11 | from a guy who owns a nome but no machine | SALEM::SAWYER | i don't listen, i argue | Thu Dec 24 1987 11:59 | 20 |
| re.8
ok....there are indeed types of music where drums are not
present....
are you saying that, wether there are drums or not in a song, there
is always a metronome?
i doubt it.
in fact, i'll bet there's more songs with drums than with
metronomes.
in fact, i'll bet there are only a handfull of adventurous composers
who used a metronome as one of the pieces of an arrangement...(me?)
my basic point is this ; a drum machine can not only behave as a
drum machine, it can also act as a metronome! where-as, a metronome
can only be used as a metronome!....
so forget the metronome, get a drum machine.
|
442.12 | Surrender/Burn All Metronomes | AQUA::ROST | December boys got it bad | Thu Dec 24 1987 12:50 | 10 |
|
OK, OK I give up....
My metronome cost me $19.95. How much was your drum machine....
8^) 8^) 8^) 8^) 8^)
Merry Christmas, all....
|
442.13 | | PNO::HEISER | It's a BOY!!! | Tue Jan 09 1990 10:10 | 8 |
| Dumb Question alert!!!
Now that I have a metronome, I'm trying to figure out how to use it.
What is the formula to convert a time signature to beats per minute?
Example: 4/4 = x beats per minute
Mike
|
442.14 | How Complicated Would You Like To Make This? | AQUA::ROST | Everyone loves those dead presidents | Tue Jan 09 1990 10:31 | 11 |
|
Re: .13
Huh?
You wind it up and let it go....8^) 8^) 8^)
Most metronomes count in "1/1", i.e. they just go click-click. The tempo
setting is how many clicks/beats it makes per minute.
Brian
|
442.15 | Tempo | HPSTEK::PELLETIER | Nuthin's Shakin' | Tue Jan 09 1990 10:52 | 4 |
| 4/4 time could be 100 beats per minute or 2 beats per minute. That
only means 4 full beats per measure.
Bill
|
442.16 | Beats per minute. | MCIS5::NOVELLO | | Tue Jan 09 1990 11:06 | 9 |
|
Most sheet music have metronome markings, like a quarternote = 60
BPM, so you set the dial to 60 and wail away.
Does this answer the question?
Guy
|
442.17 | | PNO::HEISER | It's a BOY!!! | Tue Jan 09 1990 11:33 | 5 |
| Re: last 2
Yeah I get it, thanks!
Mike
|
442.18 | metronome recommendations pls | RAVEN1::BLAIR | sow character, reap destiny | Wed Feb 19 1992 11:54 | 8 |
|
I have decided to purchase a metronome and would like opinions
on models, wind-up vs battery, digital display vs pendulum, etc.
It don't gotta be fancy, I'm more interested in usability and
durability. Pricing info would be a bonus.
keeping time.
-pat (click, click, snare, bass, click, click...)
|
442.19 | Seth Thomas | RGB::ROST | The Legend Lives On: Jah Rostafari | Wed Feb 19 1992 12:39 | 15 |
| The old standby Seth Thomas windup units sell for about $30.
Durability? As long as you don't drop it a lot (they're made out of
plastic these days rather than wood) it'll probably last forever. I
*have* dropped mine but it still works just fine after 15 years.
Usability? You need a level surface to place it on. Then there are
also the smaller German units (with unpronouncable names) for a bit
more.
Electronic ones start in the $40 range but I find them annoying. Maybe
I'm too old fashioned. Roland is still making a version of the Dr. Beat
which can do some odd time signatures and stuff. Korg sells a tuner
with built-in metronome (DTM-12) if you wanna kill two birds with one
stone.
Brian
|
442.20 | easy to spend $$$$ | EZ2GET::STEWART | the leper with the most fingers | Wed Feb 19 1992 12:59 | 5 |
|
Or you could pick up a cheap used drum machine...
|
442.21 | Drum machine | WEDOIT::KELLYJ | Master of rhythm, Phd in swing | Wed Feb 19 1992 14:04 | 2 |
| Go for the used drum machine, IMHO. The 'one' of the measure can be
accented on them and it makes counting much easier.
|
442.22 | don't want no drum machine | RAVEN1::BLAIR | sow character, reap destiny | Wed Feb 19 1992 14:07 | 1 |
|
|
442.23 | | WASTED::tomg | My paradigm is broken | Wed Feb 19 1992 14:36 | 14 |
|
I dunno if you forgot a smiley face, but...
You may not want one, but IMHO, you're
*much* better off getting one. You can find good, useable
machines like the TR505 are under $100. It can do the
metronome thing *and* if you want to do drum stuff
later, you can do that too...
-T
|
442.24 | Seiko SQM-342 | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Now I'm down in it | Wed Feb 19 1992 14:48 | 24 |
| Patman,
You can get various forms of the little electronic ones starting at
about $10-$12 bucks. These have more functions then the old analog
ones, cost less, and will probably operate more reliabily longer.
I've seen the little credit-card ones going for under $20.
I have a little dinky Seiko one that I paid like $45 for about 6 years
ago. It looks like a digital stopwatch. Has a clock (so you know how
long you've practiced), stopwatch (handy for timing songs), an alarm
(if you have an appointment), straight metronome (40-208 bpm, with a
little LCD stripe that runs across the top to show the beat visually),
varied metronome (where you can have an audio accent on every 2,3,4,5,
or 6 beats, double time, and triplets), plus it generates tones you can
tune with which from 415 Hz to 445 Hz base and allow you to generate
all pitches of all 12 related notes off that base.
I highly recommend it because the size is nicely portable and it's
functionality rich. These are still sold today, I just saw some down
at Rice Music a few weeks ago. I think they're cheaper now, about
$30-$35.
Greg (who should practice with his more!)
|
442.25 | | RAVEN1::BLAIR | sow character, reap destiny | Wed Feb 19 1992 15:26 | 9 |
|
Thanks Greg and Brian.
re: -2
I owned a DR550 for a while anit made me crazy. I'm a simple
blues man, computers are a fad (hopefully). 8^)
-purist pat
|
442.26 | | KDX200::COOPER | Step UP to the RACK ! | Wed Feb 19 1992 15:49 | 6 |
| I've used my drum machine in real-time edit mode... Makes a nice click,
with the 1st beat of the measure and stuff - no programming...
But I do know that Pat has a drum machine, so I can dig where he's coming from.
jc
|
442.27 | For the "tonally challenged"? | NWACES::HICKERNELL | Subvert the Dominant Paradigm | Thu Feb 20 1992 08:46 | 7 |
| re: .24
> little LCD stripe that runs across the top to show the beat visually),
That's in case you're deaf, right? :-)
Dave
|
442.28 | Useful! | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Now I'm down in it | Thu Feb 20 1992 09:12 | 17 |
| Yeah, something like that. 8^)
Perhaps more useful if your guitar (or amp) is too loud for you to hear
the little "beep" the thing makes clearly. The volume isn't adjustable
and even a powerful acoustic could render it unhearable in certain
circumstances.
Could also be useful for extremely low volume practicing, as the stripe
keeps dashing across the little LCD screen whether you turn the "beep"
on or not. The beep can become annoying to people not involved with
your practicing REAL fast...
I always like the metronomes with a little light on 'em, but I like the
stripe better because it gives you a visual indication of partial
beats.
gh
|
442.29 | | SOLVIT::OLOUGHLIN | The fun begins at 80! | Thu Feb 20 1992 09:45 | 17 |
|
Pat, you _didn't_ like the 550? I am in love with mine. I guess
the difference being you gig and I don't. The 550 just makes things
come together soooooooo nicely. I no longer have the feeling that
I'm just playing with myself now, (or playing by myself might be better
said.)
BTW, I didn't say the above so yousse guyz can have fun, but the
shields are up now anyway.
8^)
Rick.
|
442.30 | | SOLVIT::OLOUGHLIN | The fun begins at 80! | Thu Feb 20 1992 09:48 | 9 |
|
Oh yeah, I meant to say that I have a met at home that you can
have cheap, say 20 bones. Cost 45, hasn't been used for more than
an hour or two. Quartz. Click, flash, or click and flash.
Rick.
|
442.31 | | CAVLRY::BUCK | Nothing really matters... | Thu Feb 20 1992 10:02 | 1 |
| I wanna get a cheapo drum machine...any ideas?
|
442.32 | | RAVEN1::JERRYWHITE | Hey you're pretty good - NOT ! | Thu Feb 20 1992 10:08 | 1 |
| Tap your foot ... 8^)
|
442.33 | on the level | TOOK::SCHUCHARD | i got virtual connections... | Thu Feb 20 1992 10:20 | 6 |
|
if you have an old-farmhouse like mine, there are NO level surfaces
for the metronome - mine is very idle these days. Anything that will
give an electric precise tick (tse-tse-tse) is sufficient.
bob
|
442.34 | one of them battery powered monkeys | FRETZ::HEISER | stop making sense! | Thu Feb 20 1992 10:27 | 1 |
|
|
442.35 | | KURMA::IGOLDIE | Prepare to be dazzled | Thu Feb 20 1992 10:30 | 4 |
| ....or the Duracel rabbit?
staynz
|
442.36 | | KDX200::COOPER | Step UP to the RACK ! | Thu Feb 20 1992 10:32 | 4 |
| DuraCell has a Rabbit in Scotland, Staynz ?? I think we have a rabbit for
Energizer here. :)
jc
|
442.37 | I've seend Nuno's rack!! | KURMA::IGOLDIE | Prepare to be dazzled | Thu Feb 20 1992 10:33 | 4 |
| sod off farty,I knew it was one or the other ;)
staynz............humph!!
|
442.38 | | KDX200::COOPER | Step UP to the RACK ! | Thu Feb 20 1992 10:47 | 3 |
| Sod off... Wagagagaaa... I love colloquilisms.
See, on this side of the pond - SOD is what rich people put on their lawns.
(Jab, prod, poke... :)
|
442.39 | I'm not rich | FRETZ::HEISER | stop making sense! | Thu Feb 20 1992 10:55 | 1 |
| >See, on this side of the pond - SOD is what rich people put on their lawns.
|
442.40 | | RAVEN1::BLAIR | sow character, reap destiny | Thu Feb 20 1992 11:22 | 12 |
|
Nope, I don't gig either. I just plain don't like messin around
with processors which includes drum machines, signal processors,
well you get the idea. My life seems complicated enough at times,
I just wanna play - not program.
jmho, not for everyone.
-pat
p.s. re: Jerry ("tap your foot") yuk yuk yuk
|
442.41 | Drum machine/metronome | SMURF::BENNETT | What rolls down the stairs alone or in pairs? | Thu Feb 20 1992 11:28 | 18 |
|
I had a DR-550 and it drove me nuts, too. Why? Cuz I'm a geek
and if I can program it, I will. So I spent too much time
dorking around with the machine and not enough time playing
music. It was a wonderful machine but more than I needed so
I sold it.
My current machine is a DR-110 Graphic. I found it in the case
at Daddy's Nashua for $30. It dates to ~1983 and sounds muy
cheezy. It has open and closed hats, snare, bass, cymbal, clap
and accent. I can get 4/4 16ths, 3/4 16ths, 4/4 triplets and
so on. Best part is that it programs in a full display with
all the voices visible at the same time. It runs on batteries
or uses Boss PSA-120 AND I can plug my guitar into it and
play drums and guitar into my phones. It acts as my metronome.
I set it up to play swing eights with an accent on 1 and away
I go. Not enough features to suck me into building kits and
goofing with guiros and samba whistles.
|
442.42 | | NWACES::HICKERNELL | Subvert the Dominant Paradigm | Thu Feb 20 1992 11:53 | 7 |
| re: .28
> Could also be useful for extremely low volume practicing, as the stripe
Like with a headphone amp, so *nobody* knows you're practicing.
Dave
|
442.43 | Finding a cheap drum machine | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Now I'm down in it | Thu Feb 20 1992 13:22 | 6 |
| re: buck
Watch the ads in here and COMMUSIC, used drum machines pop up fairly
often for good prices.
gh
|
442.44 | | ELWOOD::CARLIN | Balance | Tue Mar 03 1992 08:33 | 9 |
| I've had one of those little German thngs with the unpronouncable name
(mini-Taktell or a near equivalent) since I was in college(15 yrs). I used
to carry it around in my guitar case, in the little pocket. It still works
just fine and has even survived being loaned to a couple of students. I
have no idea what they get for them anymore, but they weren't real cheap
back then. However, it did last. Doesn't do anything fancy, just clicks,
with a little arm that swings back and forth.
leo
|
442.45 | Seth Thomas Is On His Way Out (Sob) | TECRUS::ROST | Fretting less, enjoying it more | Wed Dec 15 1993 07:01 | 14 |
| OK, I need (maybe) a new metronome. My teacher has given me some
exercises at near-death tempi (like under 40 bpm) and suggested retiring
my old buddy Seth Thomas since wind-up metronomes get inaccurate at
such slow tempi.
My drum machine gets down to 36 bpm, so I need to know if there are any
elctronic metronomes out there that go lower (if not, I guess Roland is
my new jamming partner).
Also any particular brand recommendations (be specific about what you
like/dislike about it)? Something with an earphone jack and *volume
control* would be nice so I could jack it into the amp.
Brian
|
442.46 | | LEDS::BURATI | boss burato | Wed Dec 15 1993 07:29 | 1 |
| But will your dog (or cat) enjoy watching it as much?
|
442.47 | | MANTHN::EDD | Busted, down in New Orleans... | Wed Dec 15 1993 07:38 | 3 |
| Dunno if it would interest you, but my MC500 gets down to 10 BPM.
Edd
|
442.48 | Low cost solution? | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Down on that shreddin' flo' | Wed Dec 15 1993 08:08 | 9 |
| Am I misunderstanding something?
Why does it matter that your drum machine only goes to 36 bpm?
Instead of using the drum machine's click, why not just program in
a simple pattern using half notes instead of quarter notes?
I find that a closed hi-hat sound or the "side stick" sound make
good substitutes for the "click".
|
442.49 | Silly Me | TECRUS::ROST | Fretting less, enjoying it more | Wed Dec 15 1993 08:29 | 8 |
| Re: .48
Hmm, you're right...I could get it down to 9 bpm that way. Oughta be
slow enough, 6.7 seconds per quarter note 8^) 8^)
OK, Roland it is...
Brian
|
442.50 | another suggestion | EZ2GET::STEWART | always took candy from strangers | Wed Dec 15 1993 09:10 | 11 |
|
You could do the same thing with a QY-10 and it fits where the sun
don't shine...
like in your pocket...
|
442.51 | another low cost solution | GAAS::GATULIS | Frank Gatulis 293-5783 | Wed Dec 15 1993 18:29 | 6 |
|
Another low cost solution (even known to work)... run that Seth-Thomas at 80
and use every other beat. 80 is reasonable for those klunkers.
|