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Wikipedia

Metronome

A metronome (from Ancient Greek μέτρον (métron) 'measure', and νομός (nomós) 'custom, melody')[1][2][3] is a device that produces an audible click or other sound at a regular interval that can be set by the user, typically in beats per minute (BPM). Metronomes may include synchronized visual motion. Musicians use the device to practise playing to a regular pulse.

A wind-up mechanical metronome

A kind of metronome was among the inventions of Andalusian polymath Abbas ibn Firnas (810–887). In 1815, German inventor Johann Maelzel patented his mechanical, wind-up metronome as a tool for musicians, under the title "Instrument/Machine for the Improvement of all Musical Performance, called Metronome".[4] In the 20th century, electronic metronomes and software metronomes were invented.

Musicians practise with metronomes to improve their timing, especially the ability to stick to a regular tempo. Metronome practice helps internalize a clear sense of timing and tempo. Composers and conductors often use a metronome as a standard tempo reference—and may play, sing, or conduct to the metronome. The metronome is used by composers to derive beats per minute if they want to indicate that in a composition. Conductors use a metronome to note their preferred tempo in each section.

When interpreting emotion and other qualities in music, performers seldom play exactly on every beat; expressive, flexible rubato may be used at times. Typically, every beat of a musically expressive performance does not align exactly with each click of a metronome.[5][6][7] This has led some musicians to criticize use of a metronome, because metronome time is different from musical time.[8]

Etymology

The word metronome first appeared in English in 1815,[9] and is Greek in origin, derived from metron—"measure" and nomos—"regulating, law". The patent registered by Maelzel in London refers to the instrument as "metronome or musical time-keeper".[10]

History

 
A Wittner mechanical wind-up metronome in motion

According to Lynn Townsend White Jr., Andalusian inventor Abbas Ibn Firnas invented an early metronome.[11]

Galileo Galilei first studied and discovered concepts involving the pendulum in the late 16th and early 17th centuries. In 1696, Etienne Loulié first successfully used an adjustable pendulum to make the first mechanical metronome—however, his design produced no sound, and did not have an escapement to keep the pendulum in motion.[12] To get the correct pulse with this kind of visual device, the musician watches the pendulum as if watching a conductor's baton.

The more familiar mechanical musical chronometer was invented by Dietrich Nikolaus Winkel in Amsterdam in 1814. Through questionable practice,[13] Johann Maelzel, incorporating Winkel's ideas, added a scale, called it a metronome and started manufacturing the metronome under his own name in 1816: "Maelzel's Metronome." The original text of Maelzel's patent in England (1815) can be downloaded.[4]

Ludwig van Beethoven was perhaps the first notable composer to indicate specific metronome markings in his music. This was done in 1815, with the corrected copy of the score of the Cantata op. 112 containing Beethoven's first metronome mark.[14]

Usage

Musicians practise playing to metronomes to develop and maintain a sense of timing and tempo. Metronomes are also used as a training tool to increase performance speed. Tempo is almost always measured in beats per minute (BPM). Even pieces that do not require a strictly constant tempo (such as with rubato) sometimes provide a BPM marking to indicate the general tempo.

A tempo marking is a term that conveys a narrow range of tempos and an associated character. For example, the term "Vivace" can indicate a tempo between 156 and 176 BPM, but it also communicates that the music should be played with a lively character. Metronomes will often include both BPM and tempo markings.[15]

A hardware (non-software/non-app based) metronome's tempo typically is adjustable from 40 to 208 BPM. The most common arrangement of tempos on a Maelzel metronome begins with at 40 beats per minute

and increases by 2s:

40 42 44 46 48 50 52 54 56 58 60

then by 3s: 63 66 69 72

then by 4s: 72 76 80 84 88 92 96 100 104 108 112 116 120

then by 6s: 126 132 138 144

then by 8s: 144 152 160 168 176 184 192 200 208.[16][17] Some digital metronomes allow adjustment to more precise tempos (e.g. increasing 120 to 121), but such a difference is hardly perceptible.[17]

Another mark that denotes tempo is M.M. (or MM), or Mälzel's Metronome. The notation M.M. is often followed by a note value and a number that indicates the tempo, as in M.M.   = 60.

Specific uses include learning to play tempos and beats consistently—for example, one fighting a tendency to speed up might play a phrase repeatedly while slightly slowing the BPM setting each time (to play more steadily)—and practising technique by setting the metronome progressively to higher speeds until the desired speed is achieved. This also helps to expose slow-downs due to technical challenges. Additionally, recording musicians use click tracks from metronomes to help audio engineers synchronize audio tracks.

In research, metronomes can be used to maintain desired cadences in different physiological laboratory-based tests.[18]

Types of metronomes

Mechanical metronomes

A mechanical metronome uses an adjustable weight on the end of an inverted pendulum rod to control tempo. The weight slides up the pendulum rod to decrease tempo, or down to increase tempo.[19] (This mechanism is also called a double-weighted pendulum, because there is a second, fixed weight on the other side of the pendulum pivot, inside the metronome case.) The pendulum swings back and forth in tempo, while a mechanism inside the metronome produces a clicking sound with each oscillation. Mechanical metronomes do not need a battery, but run from a spring-wound clockwork escapement.

Electromechanical metronomes

Electromechanical metronomes were invented by Franz Frederick.[20] Instead of using a clockwork or a quartz crystal, an electric motor is used to generate power for the mechanism. Most use a mechanical variable-speed drive combination with a momentary switch and a cam wheel to time the beats. Franz and Yamaha were common manufacturers in the 1960s and 1970s, such as the Franz LB4. A common optional feature was a neon lamp which lights up in time with the beat. Very few electromechanical metronomes provide time signature chimes in addition to the basic tempo.

Electronic metronomes

 
Electronic metronome, Wittner model

Most modern metronomes are electronic and use a quartz crystal to maintain accuracy, comparable to those used in wristwatches. The simplest electronic metronomes have a dial or buttons to control the tempo; some also produce tuning notes, usually around the range of A440 (440 hertz). Sophisticated metronomes can produce two or more distinct sounds. Tones can differ in pitch, volume, and/or timbre to demarcate downbeats from other beats, as well as compound and complex time signatures.

Many electronic musical keyboards have built-in metronome functions.

Software metronomes

Software metronomes run either as standalone applications on computers and smartphones,[21] or in music sequencing and audio multitrack software packages. In recording studio applications, such as film scoring, a software metronome may provide a click track to synchronize musicians.

Metronome applications and click tracks

Users of iPods and other portable MP3 players can use prerecorded MP3 metronome click tracks, which can use different sounds and samples instead of the usual metronome beep. Users of smartphones can install a wide range of metronome applications. The Google search engine includes an interactive metronome that can play between 40 and 218 BPM.[22] Either method avoids the need to bring a physical metronome along to lessons or practice sessions.

Use of the metronome as an instrument

Perhaps the most famous, and most direct, use of the metronome as an instrument is György Ligeti's 1962 composition, Poème Symphonique for 100 metronomes. Two years earlier, Toshi Ichiyanagi wrote Music for Electric Metronomes. Maurice Ravel used three metronomes at different speeds for the opening of his opera L'heure espagnole (1911).[23]

The clicking sounds of mechanical metronomes have sometimes been used to provide a soft rhythm track without using any of the usual percussion instruments. Paul McCartney did this on "Distractions" (Flowers in the Dirt). Following the metronome, McCartney performed a rhythm track by hitting various parts of his body.[24] Also, in Ennio Morricone's theme "Farewell to Cheyenne" (featured on Once Upon a Time in the West), the steady clip-clop beat is provided by the deliberately distorted and slowed-down sound of a mechanical metronome.[25]

William Kentridge's "The Refusal of Time" (2012) features five metronomes in the video installation.[26]

Reception

Positive views

The metronome is usually positively viewed by performers, musicologists (who spend considerable time analysing metronome markings), teachers, and conservatories. It is considered an excellent practice tool because of its steady beat, being "mathematically perfect and categorically correct".[27] This removes guesswork and aids musicians in various ways, including keeping tempos, countering tendencies to slow down or speed up, and increasing evenness and accuracy, especially in rapid passages. Metronomes are thus commonly used at all skill levels—both by students and professional musicians.[28] Likewise, the use of the metronome is valued in learning various genres with various tempos, but may not be sufficient for more complex rhythms. Nevertheless, the steady tempo (that helps identifying when one is playing offbeat) is hailed as an invaluable resource; in his doctoral thesis, Aaron M. Farrell described the metronome as a "perfect chamber music partner".[27] As a result, metronomes are often recommended to music students without reservation.[29][30]

Various quotations in favour of the metronome can be found in the book Metronome Techniques: Potpourri of quotations.[31]

Strict rhythm: modern performance practice

The metronome has been very important in performance practice, and largely unquestioned in musical pedagogy or scholarship, since the 20th century.[32] Author Miles Hoffman said that "most music teachers consider the metronome indispensable, and most professional musicians, in fact, continue to practice with a metronome throughout their careers".[28]

Author Bruce Haynes describes the role of the metronome in modern style in detail in his book The end of early music, for metronomic practice is now common worldwide.[33] He emphasizes that modern style is much more rhythmically rigid, in that tempo is steady and scores are read very literally, sometimes perceived as devoid of emotion in contrast to the rubato and bluster characteristic of Romantic music. Because of this, American musicologist and critic Richard Taruskin calls Modernism "refuge in order and precision, hostility to subjectivity, to the vagaries of personality," noting its order and precision.[33] These qualities give rise to the term metronomic, which critics use to describe more modern music with an unyielding tempo, mechanical rhythmic approach, and equal stress to all subintervals; American violinist Sol Babitz considered it "sewing machine" style with limited flexibility.[34] American musician Robert Hill also commented on the predictably regular beat characteristic of Modernism; he describes a trade-off, in that "we compensate our lack of timing flexibility by a very highly developed sense of tone-color and dynamic which, however refined and polished it may be, tends to abstract and de-personalize the music-making, underscoring its absoluteness". He also notes this as having changed greatly from the "standard" classical repertoire of the 19th century.[35]

In the early 19th century, the metronome was not used for ticking all through a piece, but only to check the tempo and then set it aside. This is in great contrast with many musicians today, who use the metronome in the background for the entirety of a piece of music.[citation needed]

Some writers draw parallels between a modern society that is "ordered by the clock" and what they see as metronomic performance practice of today's musicians.[7][32][36]

While this section highlights the modern trends of strict mechanical performance as something widespread in the 20th century and now, as early as 1860, some people advocated this type of "modern" performance practice.[37] While some in the 19th century welcomed the metronome,[38][39] others were critical (see below).

Criticism

One of the underlying reasons for much early criticism may have been the fact that unlike traditional Italian tempo indications, metronome marks indicate a highly specific tempo, and are not easily reinterpreted in the way that the traditional Italian tempo indications are. Changes in aesthetics or in the instruments themselves can easily make speeds indicated earlier problematic,[40] which may explain why many notable nineteenth-century composers including Felix Mendelssohn, Richard Wagner, Giuseppe Verdi, and Johannes Brahms criticized use of the metronome.[41]

A metronome only provides a fixed, rigid, continuous pulse. Therefore, metronome markings on sheet music provide a reference, but cannot accurately communicate the pulse, swing, or groove of music. The pulse is often irregular,[42] e.g., in accelerando, rallentando, or in musical expression as in phrasing (rubato, etc.).

Some argue that a metronomic performance stands in conflict with an expressive culturally-aware performance of music, so that a metronome a very limited tool in this respect. Even such highly rhythmical musical forms as samba, if performed in correct cultural style, cannot be captured with the beats of a metronome; the steady beat of a metronome neglects the characteristic swing of samba.[43][44] A style of performance that is unfailingly regular rhythmically might be criticized as being metronomic.

Others argue that the metronome has no musical value, instead costing creativity and hurting the sense of rhythm in musicians rather than helping it. The use of a metronome has been compared to the difference between mechanically-aided and freehand drawing, in that the output with a metronome is said to be rigid and lacking creativity.[45] Similarly, the controllable constant speed and rigid repetition of a metronome has been described as possibly costing internal rhythm and musicality when abused or overused.[46] This contrasts with those who advocate its use as a training tool and exercises to cultivate a sense of rhythm.

American composer and critic Daniel Gregory Mason wrote that the use of the metronome is "dangerous" because it leads musicians to play by the measure or beat instead of the phrase, at the expense of liveliness, instinct, and rhythmical energy. He references that "good performances" commonly feature retardations and accelerations, in contrast to the steady beat of a metronome.[47] This opinion has also been expressed by music teachers; for example, teacher Jennifer Merry relates the steady beat of a metronome to the structure of contemporary popular music, and says that both factors hinder understanding of rhythm and tempo in young children.[48] These criticisms emphasize the importance of intuition, nuances, and style, rather than the rigid, steady beat of a metronome.

Metronome technique

Metronome technique is extensive and has been the subject of several books.[49][50][51] This section summarizes some of the main ideas and approaches. The "intuitive" approach to metronome practice is to simply play along with a metronome. With metronome technique, musicians do separate exercises to strengthen and steady their sense of rhythm and tempo, and increase their sensitivity to musical time and precision.

Playing "in the pocket"

2
4
at a tempo of 60 BPM.

The basic skill required is the ability to play precisely in the pocket—that is, exactly on the click of the metronome[52]—with the metronome in a relaxed fashion. It helps musicians instil a more accurate sense of time clearly and precisely, at intervals corresponding to fractions of a second. One challenge with this approach, especially for pianists and percussionists, is the metronome click seeming to vanish (or at least be heard less distinctly) when one hits the click exactly. Musicians who attempt to play in the pocket with a metronome without established technique may find that it introduces tension and effort into their instrument technique.

To address these difficulties, musicians start by learning to play consistently ahead or behind the beat whenever they want to. As a result, they develop a clear sense of "where the click is" and can train to hit the click as well.

Musicians also listen to how the sound of their playing merges with the metronome to create a new sound when playing precisely in the pocket. Various approaches suggest that by listening in this way (and through other exercises), it is possible to play precisely in the pocket with the metronome in a relaxed fashion.[53][54][55][56] While learning how to play in the pocket, musicians also work on flexibility and the ability to play precisely anywhere in the beat (as in more complex rhythms).

Precision of timing and sensitivity to musical time

2
4
at 60 BPM. This track plays 5 measures then goes silent for 2, 3, 4, and 8 measures (alternating with 2 measures played). One common exercise in metronome technique is to help internalize a precise sense of time and tempo.

Much of modern metronome technique involves various methods to help resolve timing problems. It aims to encourage and develop a clear sense of musical time and to help with the nuances and precision of timing, but at the same time must avoid creating overdependence on the metronome. Many exercises are used to help with precision of timing and sensitivity to time, such as maintaining the beat (staying in time) while the metronome is silent for longer periods of time,[57] and playing displaced clicks[58] or polyrhythms over the metronome.

Musically expressive rhythms

Modern metronome technique addresses expressive musical rhythms in many ways. For instance, much of the focus of modern metronome technique is on encouraging and developing a solid sense of tempo and timing, in both thinking and playing; as a result, one will be more rhythmically conscious.

Special metronome exercises are used to help keep this fluid sense of rhythm and timing when working with the metronome. Some commonly referenced exercises include drifting gradually from one beat to the next, playing beats ahead or behind the click (to become comfortable with playing anywhere relative to the metronome click), and starting from a pulse unison before gradually pushing notes ahead of the click and then pulling back again to pulse unison (or conversely, first pulling behind the pulse).[59]

Author Andrew Lewis stated that one can also develop a higher level of awareness of the many natural rhythms in their everyday life, and use exercises to help bring those rhythms into their music.[60] Likewise, author Mac Santiago emphasizes that use of a metronome helps to improve one's sense of time and exact timing without causing any of the expected problems for musicality and expressive timing, and rhythm itself is natural to human beings (though an exact sense of the passage of time is not) but must be trained for use in music. Santiago's book states:

Time Feel, the subject of Chapter 7, is one of the great keys to musicality for rhythm section instruments. But being able to play behind or ahead of the pulse can also add expression to a melodic line. This, along with slight changes in dynamics, creates phrasing in music. The ability to hear the pulse and yet accelerate or decelerate slightly is a great way to incorporate human feeling into a musical performance. Of course, this is all relative to the tempo, and is best achieved relative to a steady tempo. In other words, the more definite your sense of pulse, the better your capability to manipulate it. This also works for the actions of ritardando and accelerando, as they are relative to a steady pulse and are best performed gradually rather than in sudden shifts"[61]

Lewis also says in his book that increasing sensitivity to rhythm is essential to develop greater precision of timing and a clearer sense of the passage of musical time—relative to which musicians can then use expressive, natural and fluid rhythms, with as much rubato and tempo variance as they wish for. Lewis' book states:

Rhythm is everywhere. Be sensitive to it, and stay aware of spontaneous occurrences that can spur rhythmic development. Listen all the time and use your imagination. Become a rhythm antenna.[62]

Alternatives to metronome use

If a musician decides not to use a metronome, other methods are required to deal with timing and tempo glitches, and rushing and dragging. These ideas may also be useful as a complementary approach along with metronome technique.

Humans rely on a sense of rhythm to perform ordinary activities such as walking, running, hammering nails or chopping vegetables. Even speech and thought have a rhythm of sorts. According to author Andrew Lewis, one way to work on rhythms is to work on bringing these into music, becoming a "rhythm antenna".[62] Until the 19th century in Europe, people used to sing as they worked, in time to the rhythms of their work. Musical rhythms were part of daily life; English musician Cecil Sharp collected some of these songs before they were forgotten. (See also work song and sea shanties.) In many parts of the world, music remains an important part of daily life. There are many accounts of people (especially tribal people) who sing frequently and spontaneously in their daily life, as they work, and as they engage in other activities. For example:

"Benny Wenda, a Lani man from the highlands, is a Papuan leader now in exile in the UK, and a singer. There are songs for everything, he says: songs for climbing a mountain, songs for the fireside, songs for gardening. "Since people are interconnected with the land, women will sing to the seed of the sweet potato as they plant it, so the earth will be happy." Meanwhile, men will sing to the soil until it softens enough to dig."[63]

Musicians may also work on strengthening their sense of pulse using inner sources, such as breath and subdividing breaths, or instead work with the imagination, imagining a pulse. They may also work with their heart beat, and rhythms in their chest muscles in the same way.[62] Another thing they do is to play music in their mind's ear along with the rhythms of walking or other daily life rhythms. Other techniques include hearing music in one's mind first before playing it. Musicians can deal with timing and tempo glitches by learning to hear a perfect performance in their mind first.

In some styles of music, such as early music notes inégales (according to one minority view interpretation), it can be appropriate to use a different approach that does not work so much with a sense of inner pulse, but rather works on ideas of gestures and is more closely related to rhythms of speech and poetry.

Some ideas are given by Marianne Ploger and Keith Hill in The Craft of Musical Communication.[64] They state that notes should be subtly unequal—having no three notes the same helps to keep the music alive and interesting, in contrast to something that could be perceived as rigid and monotonous, and helps prevent any feeling of sameness and boredom in the music— the idea of "Entasis". Notes and musical phrases can also be organized in gestures—particular patterns of rhythm that come naturally—rather than strict measures. Another alternative is delaying individual notes, such as waiting slightly longer to play the notes expected at the end of a musical phrase, building anticipation. Additionally, notes played together can be allowed to go somewhat out of time with each other in a care-free fashion "sans souci"—this can create a feeling of "relaxed effortlessness" when notes are deliberately played irregularly (compared to what is notated in the score).[64]

This is a minority view on interpretation of this style of music, but noteworthy because of its different approach to musical time and rhythm, and its relevance to the way rhythms can be practised. The more generally accepted view is that notes inégales were played with the same amount of swing nearly all the time, like modern jazz.

See also

References

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  2. ^ "nomo". perseus.tufts.edu. Perseus Digital Library (Greek Word Study Tool). Retrieved 2022-02-25.
  3. ^ "metronome". Merriam-Webster Dictionary. Retrieved 2022-02-25.
  4. ^ a b Maelzel's patent of the Metronome The Repertory of patent inventions: and other discoveries and improvements in arts, manufactures, and agriculture ... published by T. and G. Underwood, 1818 (alternative)
  5. ^ Andrew Robertson. "Decoding tempo and timing variations in music recordings from beat annotations" 2013-10-19 at the Wayback Machine. Proceedings of the 13th International Society for Music Information Retrieval Conference (ISMIR 2012).
  6. ^ Vijay Iyar. Microtiming Studies 2012-11-03 at the Wayback Machine(from thesis at Berkeley university).
  7. ^ a b Alexander Bonus. "The Metronomic Performance Practice: A History of Rhythm, Metronomes, and the Mechanization of Musicality"; PhD thesis, May 2010.
  8. ^ Jon Frederickson. "Technology and Music Performance in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction" 2016-11-17 at the Wayback Machine, p. 210, section "The Metronome vs. Musical Time".
  9. ^ "Oxford English Dictionary online". from the original on 2006-06-25. Retrieved 2009-01-16.
  10. ^ cf. Patent N° 3966, dated December 5, 1815.
  11. ^ Lynn Townsend White Jr. (Spring, 1961). "Eilmer of Malmesbury, an Eleventh Century Aviator: A Case Study of Technological Innovation, Its Context and Tradition", Technology and Culture 2 (2), p. 97–111 [100]: "Ibn Firnas was a polymath: a physician, a rather bad poet, the first to make glass from stones (quartz), a student of music, and inventor of some sort of metronome."
  12. ^ "A Brief History of the Metronome". Franz Manufacturing Company, Inc. from the original on 2010-03-24. Retrieved 2010-04-02.
  13. ^ The Metronome; The Harmonicon, Volume 8, 1830
  14. ^ Noorduin, Marten (2020). "Why Do We Need Another Recording of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony? – Symphony No. 9 Benjamin Zander Discusses Beethoven's Ninth Symphony – Rebecca Evans sop, Patricia Bardon mezzo-sop, Robert Murray ten, Derek Welton bass-bar Philharmonia Chorus and Orchestra, Stefan Bevier chorus master, Benjamin Zander cond. Brattle Media 610877733781 3 CDs: 58 minutes [music] + 159 minutes [discussion] Notes and discussion in English". Nineteenth-Century Music Review: 1–9. doi:10.1017/S1479409820000026. ISSN 1479-4098.
  15. ^ "Dictionary of Tempo Markings".
  16. ^ "Search Results for "metronome" – Matthew Hindson". hindson.com.au. from the original on 2014-04-26.
  17. ^ a b Paterson, R. (2006). "Standard Metronome Timings and Ratios". Retrieved 2020-07-04.
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  20. ^ "Patent US2715841A: Drive mechanism for electric metronomes or the like"
  21. ^ "Big list of Windows and Online Metronomes – Bounce Metronome". robertinventor.com. from the original on 2012-07-24.
  22. ^ "metronome – Google Search". www.google.com. Retrieved 2019-05-14.
  23. ^ "Getting to the heart of Ravel's opera double bill" 2017-09-09 at the Wayback Machine by Sanjoy Roy, The Guardian, 17 August 2012
  24. ^ Flowers in the Dirt 1993 Reissue CD booklet; credited as "Metronome and body percussion".
  25. ^ 1995 Remastered and Expanded Edition CD booklet liner notes.
  26. ^ Baker, Kenneth, "In, out of sync with William Kentridge's 'Time'" 2013-12-13 at the Wayback Machine, SFGate.com, November 6, 2013. Retrieved 2013-12-08.
  27. ^ a b A Practical Guide To Twentieth-Century Violin Etudes With Performance And Theoretical Analysis 2010-06-28 at the Wayback Machine; by Aaron M. Farrell
  28. ^ a b Hoffman, Miles (1997). The NPR Classical Music Companion: Terms and Concepts from A to Z. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. ISBN 978-0618619450.
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  31. ^ "Metronome Techniques – Uses of the Metronome". www.franzmfg.com. from the original on 2011-07-11.
  32. ^ a b Refashioning Rhythm: Hearing, Acting and Reacting to Metronomic Sound in Experimental Psychology and Beyond, c.1875–1920 by Alexander Bonus (see also)
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  34. ^ The end of early music: a period performer's history of music for the twenty-first century 2011-06-04 at the Wayback Machine; page 57; (Oxford University Press) by Bruce Haynes
  35. ^ "Overcoming Romanticism": On the modernization of twentieth century performance practice by (Chapter 3 contribution to Music and Performance During the Weimar Republic 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine; Cambridge University Press; November 2005)
  36. ^ Metronomic society: Natural rhythms and human timetables (1988) by Michael Young – see also review incl. image by Ingram Pinn
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  38. ^ "On Music", p. 413The New Monthly Magazine and Literary Journal, Volume 7 (1823)
  39. ^ A musical biography: or, Sketches of the lives and writings of eminent musical characters compiled by John R. Parker, Stone & Fovell (1825).
  40. ^ Noorduin, Marten (August 2018). "Re-examining Czerny's and Moscheles's Metronome Marks for Beethoven's Piano Sonatas". Nineteenth-Century Music Review. 15 (2): 209–235. doi:10.1017/S1479409817000027. ISSN 1479-4098. S2CID 193737315.
  41. ^ "Thoughts on Tempi". Essays on the Origins of Western Music. David Whitwell. from the original on 2008-04-09.; quotes from Beethoven, Berlioz, and Liszt are referenced here.
  42. ^ Justin London. "Pulse." In Grove Music Online. Oxford Music Online, (accessed July 28, 2008)
  43. ^ by Pedro Batista (original, alt.1 2012-03-23 at the Wayback Machine, )
  44. ^ Analyzing the earliest (pre-1930) samba recordings (e.g. Pelo Telefone from 1917), reveals strong differences with many of today's "samba" performances, many of which have a very different – sterile, modernist, metronomic ("corrupted") rhythm.
  45. ^ The Amateur String Quartet 2017-01-06 at the Wayback Machine by James Brown III; The Musical Times, Vol. 68, No. 1014 (August 1, 1927)
  46. ^ "Fundamentals of Piano Practice: free online piano lessons – learn, teach piano". www.pianopractice.org. from the original on 2010-07-10.
  47. ^ Source from "The Tyranny of the Bar-Line" by Daniel Gregory Mason; The New Music Review and Church Music Review, vol 9 (American Guild of Organists); 1909
  48. ^ How do you teach the difference between counting rhythm and musical rhythm? 2010-10-28 at the Wayback Machine
  49. ^ Frederick Franz, revised by Jon Truelson Metronome Techniques 2012-06-03 at the Wayback Machine
  50. ^ Andrew Lewis's Rhythm, What it is and how to improve your sense of it 2012-12-06 at the Wayback Machine especially his book 2 How to improve your sense of rhythm 2012-12-06 at the Wayback Machine ISBN 0975466704
  51. ^ Mac Santiago "Beyond the metronome" 2012-12-21 at the Wayback Machine ISBN 1450731945
  52. ^ Niedt, D. "The Metronome is Your Friend". Retrieved 2020-07-04.
  53. ^ Mac Santiago "Beyond the metronome" 2012-12-21 at the Wayback Machine – see Lesson 4: Rhythmony
  54. ^ Tom Hess music corporation How To Practice Guitar Effectively With And Without A Metronome 2012-10-28 at the Wayback Machine
  55. ^ StudyBass interactive online lessons: Keeping The Beat 2012-01-19 at the Wayback Machine
  56. ^ Max Krimmel (guitar builder) Online Metronome Course 2012-11-06 at the Wayback Machine
  57. ^ Mac Santiago "Beyond the metronome" 2012-12-21 at the Wayback Machine – see Chapter 3: The Diminishing Click particularly
  58. ^ Mac Santiago "Beyond the metronome" 2012-12-21 at the Wayback Machine – see Lesson 7: Being Inchronouse around the Click
  59. ^ Andrew Lewis Book 4: Rhythm in Performance 2012-12-06 at the Wayback Machine – see the section on Fluidity and Flexibility and the various Flexibility exercises particularly
  60. ^ Andrew Lewis Book 2: How to Improve your Sense of Rhythm 2012-12-06 at the Wayback Machine – see the section on "Improving Pulse and Rhythm Through Motion and Action" particularly
  61. ^ Mac Santiago "Beyond the Metronome" 2010, Chapter 8, page 39
  62. ^ a b c Andrew Lewis Rhythm – What it is and How to Improve Your Sense of It 2012-12-06 at the Wayback Machine, book II How to Improve Your Sense of Rhythm – A practical step-by-step guide to developing and strengthening rhythm and inner pulse, page 55 "Improving Pulse and Rhythm Using Nature and Aspects of Daily Life"
  63. ^ Griffiths, Jay (15 March 2011). "Songs and freedom in West Papua". The Guardian. from the original on 10 October 2017.
  64. ^ a b Marianne Ploger and Keith Hill The Craft of Musical Communication 2013-01-21 at the Wayback Machine Orphei Organi Antiqui 2005

External links

  •   Media related to Metronomes at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Quotations related to Metronome at Wikiquote
  • Research by Alexander Evan Bonus
    • The Metronomic Performance Practice: A History of Rhythm, Metronomes, and the Mechanization of Musicality; PhD Thesis by Alexander E. Bonus (May 2010)
    • A Timely Musical Discourse, or A Music Treatise from Lost Times, Part I (Current Musicology, (95)) by Alexander E. Bonus (March 2013)
    • Metronome (Oxford Handbooks Online) by Alexander E. Bonus (April 2014)
    • Maelzel, the Metronome, and the Modern Mechanics of Musical Time (The Oxford Handbook of Time in Music) by Alexander E. Bonus (December 2021)
  • Beethoven's Tempo Indications, PhD Thesis by Marten Noorduin (July 2016)

metronome, other, uses, disambiguation, metronome, from, ancient, greek, μέτρον, métron, measure, νομός, nomós, custom, melody, device, that, produces, audible, click, other, sound, regular, interval, that, user, typically, beats, minute, include, synchronized. For other uses see Metronome disambiguation A metronome from Ancient Greek metron metron measure and nomos nomos custom melody 1 2 3 is a device that produces an audible click or other sound at a regular interval that can be set by the user typically in beats per minute BPM Metronomes may include synchronized visual motion Musicians use the device to practise playing to a regular pulse A wind up mechanical metronome A kind of metronome was among the inventions of Andalusian polymath Abbas ibn Firnas 810 887 In 1815 German inventor Johann Maelzel patented his mechanical wind up metronome as a tool for musicians under the title Instrument Machine for the Improvement of all Musical Performance called Metronome 4 In the 20th century electronic metronomes and software metronomes were invented Musicians practise with metronomes to improve their timing especially the ability to stick to a regular tempo Metronome practice helps internalize a clear sense of timing and tempo Composers and conductors often use a metronome as a standard tempo reference and may play sing or conduct to the metronome The metronome is used by composers to derive beats per minute if they want to indicate that in a composition Conductors use a metronome to note their preferred tempo in each section When interpreting emotion and other qualities in music performers seldom play exactly on every beat expressive flexible rubato may be used at times Typically every beat of a musically expressive performance does not align exactly with each click of a metronome 5 6 7 This has led some musicians to criticize use of a metronome because metronome time is different from musical time 8 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 3 Usage 4 Types of metronomes 4 1 Mechanical metronomes 4 2 Electromechanical metronomes 4 3 Electronic metronomes 4 4 Software metronomes 4 4 1 Metronome applications and click tracks 5 Use of the metronome as an instrument 6 Reception 6 1 Positive views 6 2 Strict rhythm modern performance practice 6 3 Criticism 7 Metronome technique 7 1 Playing in the pocket 7 2 Precision of timing and sensitivity to musical time 7 3 Musically expressive rhythms 8 Alternatives to metronome use 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksEtymology EditThe word metronome first appeared in English in 1815 9 and is Greek in origin derived from metron measure and nomos regulating law The patent registered by Maelzel in London refers to the instrument as metronome or musical time keeper 10 History Edit A Wittner mechanical wind up metronome in motion According to Lynn Townsend White Jr Andalusian inventor Abbas Ibn Firnas invented an early metronome 11 Galileo Galilei first studied and discovered concepts involving the pendulum in the late 16th and early 17th centuries In 1696 Etienne Loulie first successfully used an adjustable pendulum to make the first mechanical metronome however his design produced no sound and did not have an escapement to keep the pendulum in motion 12 To get the correct pulse with this kind of visual device the musician watches the pendulum as if watching a conductor s baton The more familiar mechanical musical chronometer was invented by Dietrich Nikolaus Winkel in Amsterdam in 1814 Through questionable practice 13 Johann Maelzel incorporating Winkel s ideas added a scale called it a metronome and started manufacturing the metronome under his own name in 1816 Maelzel s Metronome The original text of Maelzel s patent in England 1815 can be downloaded 4 Ludwig van Beethoven was perhaps the first notable composer to indicate specific metronome markings in his music This was done in 1815 with the corrected copy of the score of the Cantata op 112 containing Beethoven s first metronome mark 14 Usage EditMusicians practise playing to metronomes to develop and maintain a sense of timing and tempo Metronomes are also used as a training tool to increase performance speed Tempo is almost always measured in beats per minute BPM Even pieces that do not require a strictly constant tempo such as with rubato sometimes provide a BPM marking to indicate the general tempo A tempo marking is a term that conveys a narrow range of tempos and an associated character For example the term Vivace can indicate a tempo between 156 and 176 BPM but it also communicates that the music should be played with a lively character Metronomes will often include both BPM and tempo markings 15 A hardware non software non app based metronome s tempo typically is adjustable from 40 to 208 BPM The most common arrangement of tempos on a Maelzel metronome begins with at 40 beats per minuteand increases by 2s 40 42 44 46 48 50 52 54 56 58 60then by 3s 63 66 69 72then by 4s 72 76 80 84 88 92 96 100 104 108 112 116 120then by 6s 126 132 138 144then by 8s 144 152 160 168 176 184 192 200 208 16 17 Some digital metronomes allow adjustment to more precise tempos e g increasing 120 to 121 but such a difference is hardly perceptible 17 Another mark that denotes tempo is M M or MM or Malzel s Metronome The notation M M is often followed by a note value and a number that indicates the tempo as in M M 60 Specific uses include learning to play tempos and beats consistently for example one fighting a tendency to speed up might play a phrase repeatedly while slightly slowing the BPM setting each time to play more steadily and practising technique by setting the metronome progressively to higher speeds until the desired speed is achieved This also helps to expose slow downs due to technical challenges Additionally recording musicians use click tracks from metronomes to help audio engineers synchronize audio tracks In research metronomes can be used to maintain desired cadences in different physiological laboratory based tests 18 Types of metronomes Edit Click track at 120 BPM source source Click track at 50 BPM subdivided into sixteenth notes source source Problems playing these files See media help Mechanical metronomes Edit A mechanical metronome uses an adjustable weight on the end of an inverted pendulum rod to control tempo The weight slides up the pendulum rod to decrease tempo or down to increase tempo 19 This mechanism is also called a double weighted pendulum because there is a second fixed weight on the other side of the pendulum pivot inside the metronome case The pendulum swings back and forth in tempo while a mechanism inside the metronome produces a clicking sound with each oscillation Mechanical metronomes do not need a battery but run from a spring wound clockwork escapement Electromechanical metronomes Edit Electromechanical metronomes were invented by Franz Frederick 20 Instead of using a clockwork or a quartz crystal an electric motor is used to generate power for the mechanism Most use a mechanical variable speed drive combination with a momentary switch and a cam wheel to time the beats Franz and Yamaha were common manufacturers in the 1960s and 1970s such as the Franz LB4 A common optional feature was a neon lamp which lights up in time with the beat Very few electromechanical metronomes provide time signature chimes in addition to the basic tempo Electronic metronomes Edit Electronic metronome Wittner model Most modern metronomes are electronic and use a quartz crystal to maintain accuracy comparable to those used in wristwatches The simplest electronic metronomes have a dial or buttons to control the tempo some also produce tuning notes usually around the range of A440 440 hertz Sophisticated metronomes can produce two or more distinct sounds Tones can differ in pitch volume and or timbre to demarcate downbeats from other beats as well as compound and complex time signatures Many electronic musical keyboards have built in metronome functions Software metronomes Edit Software metronomes run either as standalone applications on computers and smartphones 21 or in music sequencing and audio multitrack software packages In recording studio applications such as film scoring a software metronome may provide a click track to synchronize musicians Metronome applications and click tracks Edit Users of iPods and other portable MP3 players can use prerecorded MP3 metronome click tracks which can use different sounds and samples instead of the usual metronome beep Users of smartphones can install a wide range of metronome applications The Google search engine includes an interactive metronome that can play between 40 and 218 BPM 22 Either method avoids the need to bring a physical metronome along to lessons or practice sessions Use of the metronome as an instrument EditPerhaps the most famous and most direct use of the metronome as an instrument is Gyorgy Ligeti s 1962 composition Poeme Symphonique for 100 metronomes Two years earlier Toshi Ichiyanagi wrote Music for Electric Metronomes Maurice Ravel used three metronomes at different speeds for the opening of his opera L heure espagnole 1911 23 The clicking sounds of mechanical metronomes have sometimes been used to provide a soft rhythm track without using any of the usual percussion instruments Paul McCartney did this on Distractions Flowers in the Dirt Following the metronome McCartney performed a rhythm track by hitting various parts of his body 24 Also in Ennio Morricone s theme Farewell to Cheyenne featured on Once Upon a Time in the West the steady clip clop beat is provided by the deliberately distorted and slowed down sound of a mechanical metronome 25 William Kentridge s The Refusal of Time 2012 features five metronomes in the video installation 26 Reception EditPositive views Edit The metronome is usually positively viewed by performers musicologists who spend considerable time analysing metronome markings teachers and conservatories It is considered an excellent practice tool because of its steady beat being mathematically perfect and categorically correct 27 This removes guesswork and aids musicians in various ways including keeping tempos countering tendencies to slow down or speed up and increasing evenness and accuracy especially in rapid passages Metronomes are thus commonly used at all skill levels both by students and professional musicians 28 Likewise the use of the metronome is valued in learning various genres with various tempos but may not be sufficient for more complex rhythms Nevertheless the steady tempo that helps identifying when one is playing offbeat is hailed as an invaluable resource in his doctoral thesis Aaron M Farrell described the metronome as a perfect chamber music partner 27 As a result metronomes are often recommended to music students without reservation 29 30 Various quotations in favour of the metronome can be found in the book Metronome Techniques Potpourri of quotations 31 Strict rhythm modern performance practice Edit The metronome has been very important in performance practice and largely unquestioned in musical pedagogy or scholarship since the 20th century 32 Author Miles Hoffman said that most music teachers consider the metronome indispensable and most professional musicians in fact continue to practice with a metronome throughout their careers 28 Author Bruce Haynes describes the role of the metronome in modern style in detail in his book The end of early music for metronomic practice is now common worldwide 33 He emphasizes that modern style is much more rhythmically rigid in that tempo is steady and scores are read very literally sometimes perceived as devoid of emotion in contrast to the rubato and bluster characteristic of Romantic music Because of this American musicologist and critic Richard Taruskin calls Modernism refuge in order and precision hostility to subjectivity to the vagaries of personality noting its order and precision 33 These qualities give rise to the term metronomic which critics use to describe more modern music with an unyielding tempo mechanical rhythmic approach and equal stress to all subintervals American violinist Sol Babitz considered it sewing machine style with limited flexibility 34 American musician Robert Hill also commented on the predictably regular beat characteristic of Modernism he describes a trade off in that we compensate our lack of timing flexibility by a very highly developed sense of tone color and dynamic which however refined and polished it may be tends to abstract and de personalize the music making underscoring its absoluteness He also notes this as having changed greatly from the standard classical repertoire of the 19th century 35 In the early 19th century the metronome was not used for ticking all through a piece but only to check the tempo and then set it aside This is in great contrast with many musicians today who use the metronome in the background for the entirety of a piece of music citation needed Some writers draw parallels between a modern society that is ordered by the clock and what they see as metronomic performance practice of today s musicians 7 32 36 While this section highlights the modern trends of strict mechanical performance as something widespread in the 20th century and now as early as 1860 some people advocated this type of modern performance practice 37 While some in the 19th century welcomed the metronome 38 39 others were critical see below Criticism Edit One of the underlying reasons for much early criticism may have been the fact that unlike traditional Italian tempo indications metronome marks indicate a highly specific tempo and are not easily reinterpreted in the way that the traditional Italian tempo indications are Changes in aesthetics or in the instruments themselves can easily make speeds indicated earlier problematic 40 which may explain why many notable nineteenth century composers including Felix Mendelssohn Richard Wagner Giuseppe Verdi and Johannes Brahms criticized use of the metronome 41 A metronome only provides a fixed rigid continuous pulse Therefore metronome markings on sheet music provide a reference but cannot accurately communicate the pulse swing or groove of music The pulse is often irregular 42 e g in accelerando rallentando or in musical expression as in phrasing rubato etc Some argue that a metronomic performance stands in conflict with an expressive culturally aware performance of music so that a metronome a very limited tool in this respect Even such highly rhythmical musical forms as samba if performed in correct cultural style cannot be captured with the beats of a metronome the steady beat of a metronome neglects the characteristic swing of samba 43 44 A style of performance that is unfailingly regular rhythmically might be criticized as being metronomic Others argue that the metronome has no musical value instead costing creativity and hurting the sense of rhythm in musicians rather than helping it The use of a metronome has been compared to the difference between mechanically aided and freehand drawing in that the output with a metronome is said to be rigid and lacking creativity 45 Similarly the controllable constant speed and rigid repetition of a metronome has been described as possibly costing internal rhythm and musicality when abused or overused 46 This contrasts with those who advocate its use as a training tool and exercises to cultivate a sense of rhythm American composer and critic Daniel Gregory Mason wrote that the use of the metronome is dangerous because it leads musicians to play by the measure or beat instead of the phrase at the expense of liveliness instinct and rhythmical energy He references that good performances commonly feature retardations and accelerations in contrast to the steady beat of a metronome 47 This opinion has also been expressed by music teachers for example teacher Jennifer Merry relates the steady beat of a metronome to the structure of contemporary popular music and says that both factors hinder understanding of rhythm and tempo in young children 48 These criticisms emphasize the importance of intuition nuances and style rather than the rigid steady beat of a metronome Metronome technique EditMetronome technique is extensive and has been the subject of several books 49 50 51 This section summarizes some of the main ideas and approaches The intuitive approach to metronome practice is to simply play along with a metronome With metronome technique musicians do separate exercises to strengthen and steady their sense of rhythm and tempo and increase their sensitivity to musical time and precision Playing in the pocket Edit source source source source source source 24 at a tempo of 60 BPM The basic skill required is the ability to play precisely in the pocket that is exactly on the click of the metronome 52 with the metronome in a relaxed fashion It helps musicians instil a more accurate sense of time clearly and precisely at intervals corresponding to fractions of a second One challenge with this approach especially for pianists and percussionists is the metronome click seeming to vanish or at least be heard less distinctly when one hits the click exactly Musicians who attempt to play in the pocket with a metronome without established technique may find that it introduces tension and effort into their instrument technique To address these difficulties musicians start by learning to play consistently ahead or behind the beat whenever they want to As a result they develop a clear sense of where the click is and can train to hit the click as well Musicians also listen to how the sound of their playing merges with the metronome to create a new sound when playing precisely in the pocket Various approaches suggest that by listening in this way and through other exercises it is possible to play precisely in the pocket with the metronome in a relaxed fashion 53 54 55 56 While learning how to play in the pocket musicians also work on flexibility and the ability to play precisely anywhere in the beat as in more complex rhythms Precision of timing and sensitivity to musical time Edit source source source source source source 24 at 60 BPM This track plays 5 measures then goes silent for 2 3 4 and 8 measures alternating with 2 measures played One common exercise in metronome technique is to help internalize a precise sense of time and tempo Much of modern metronome technique involves various methods to help resolve timing problems It aims to encourage and develop a clear sense of musical time and to help with the nuances and precision of timing but at the same time must avoid creating overdependence on the metronome Many exercises are used to help with precision of timing and sensitivity to time such as maintaining the beat staying in time while the metronome is silent for longer periods of time 57 and playing displaced clicks 58 or polyrhythms over the metronome Musically expressive rhythms Edit Modern metronome technique addresses expressive musical rhythms in many ways For instance much of the focus of modern metronome technique is on encouraging and developing a solid sense of tempo and timing in both thinking and playing as a result one will be more rhythmically conscious Special metronome exercises are used to help keep this fluid sense of rhythm and timing when working with the metronome Some commonly referenced exercises include drifting gradually from one beat to the next playing beats ahead or behind the click to become comfortable with playing anywhere relative to the metronome click and starting from a pulse unison before gradually pushing notes ahead of the click and then pulling back again to pulse unison or conversely first pulling behind the pulse 59 Author Andrew Lewis stated that one can also develop a higher level of awareness of the many natural rhythms in their everyday life and use exercises to help bring those rhythms into their music 60 Likewise author Mac Santiago emphasizes that use of a metronome helps to improve one s sense of time and exact timing without causing any of the expected problems for musicality and expressive timing and rhythm itself is natural to human beings though an exact sense of the passage of time is not but must be trained for use in music Santiago s book states Time Feel the subject of Chapter 7 is one of the great keys to musicality for rhythm section instruments But being able to play behind or ahead of the pulse can also add expression to a melodic line This along with slight changes in dynamics creates phrasing in music The ability to hear the pulse and yet accelerate or decelerate slightly is a great way to incorporate human feeling into a musical performance Of course this is all relative to the tempo and is best achieved relative to a steady tempo In other words the more definite your sense of pulse the better your capability to manipulate it This also works for the actions of ritardando and accelerando as they are relative to a steady pulse and are best performed gradually rather than in sudden shifts 61 Lewis also says in his book that increasing sensitivity to rhythm is essential to develop greater precision of timing and a clearer sense of the passage of musical time relative to which musicians can then use expressive natural and fluid rhythms with as much rubato and tempo variance as they wish for Lewis book states Rhythm is everywhere Be sensitive to it and stay aware of spontaneous occurrences that can spur rhythmic development Listen all the time and use your imagination Become a rhythm antenna 62 Alternatives to metronome use EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message If a musician decides not to use a metronome other methods are required to deal with timing and tempo glitches and rushing and dragging These ideas may also be useful as a complementary approach along with metronome technique Humans rely on a sense of rhythm to perform ordinary activities such as walking running hammering nails or chopping vegetables Even speech and thought have a rhythm of sorts According to author Andrew Lewis one way to work on rhythms is to work on bringing these into music becoming a rhythm antenna 62 Until the 19th century in Europe people used to sing as they worked in time to the rhythms of their work Musical rhythms were part of daily life English musician Cecil Sharp collected some of these songs before they were forgotten See also work song and sea shanties In many parts of the world music remains an important part of daily life There are many accounts of people especially tribal people who sing frequently and spontaneously in their daily life as they work and as they engage in other activities For example Benny Wenda a Lani man from the highlands is a Papuan leader now in exile in the UK and a singer There are songs for everything he says songs for climbing a mountain songs for the fireside songs for gardening Since people are interconnected with the land women will sing to the seed of the sweet potato as they plant it so the earth will be happy Meanwhile men will sing to the soil until it softens enough to dig 63 Musicians may also work on strengthening their sense of pulse using inner sources such as breath and subdividing breaths or instead work with the imagination imagining a pulse They may also work with their heart beat and rhythms in their chest muscles in the same way 62 Another thing they do is to play music in their mind s ear along with the rhythms of walking or other daily life rhythms Other techniques include hearing music in one s mind first before playing it Musicians can deal with timing and tempo glitches by learning to hear a perfect performance in their mind first In some styles of music such as early music notes inegales according to one minority view interpretation it can be appropriate to use a different approach that does not work so much with a sense of inner pulse but rather works on ideas of gestures and is more closely related to rhythms of speech and poetry Some ideas are given by Marianne Ploger and Keith Hill in The Craft of Musical Communication 64 They state that notes should be subtly unequal having no three notes the same helps to keep the music alive and interesting in contrast to something that could be perceived as rigid and monotonous and helps prevent any feeling of sameness and boredom in the music the idea of Entasis Notes and musical phrases can also be organized in gestures particular patterns of rhythm that come naturally rather than strict measures Another alternative is delaying individual notes such as waiting slightly longer to play the notes expected at the end of a musical phrase building anticipation Additionally notes played together can be allowed to go somewhat out of time with each other in a care free fashion sans souci this can create a feeling of relaxed effortlessness when notes are deliberately played irregularly compared to what is notated in the score 64 This is a minority view on interpretation of this style of music but noteworthy because of its different approach to musical time and rhythm and its relevance to the way rhythms can be practised The more generally accepted view is that notes inegales were played with the same amount of swing nearly all the time like modern jazz See also EditBeat music OscillatorReferences Edit metron perseus tufts edu Perseus Digital Library Greek Word Study Tool Retrieved 2022 02 25 nomo perseus tufts edu Perseus Digital Library Greek Word Study Tool Retrieved 2022 02 25 metronome Merriam Webster Dictionary Retrieved 2022 02 25 a b Maelzel s patent of the Metronome The Repertory of patent inventions and other discoveries and improvements in arts manufactures and agriculture published by T and G Underwood 1818 alternative Andrew Robertson Decoding tempo and timing variations in music recordings from beat annotations Archived 2013 10 19 at the Wayback Machine Proceedings of the 13th International Society for Music Information Retrieval Conference ISMIR 2012 Vijay Iyar Microtiming Studies Archived 2012 11 03 at the Wayback Machine from thesis at Berkeley university a b Alexander Bonus The Metronomic Performance Practice A History of Rhythm Metronomes and the Mechanization of Musicality PhD thesis May 2010 Jon Frederickson Technology and Music Performance in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction Archived 2016 11 17 at the Wayback Machine p 210 section The Metronome vs Musical Time Oxford English Dictionary online Archived from the original on 2006 06 25 Retrieved 2009 01 16 cf Patent N 3966 dated December 5 1815 Lynn Townsend White Jr Spring 1961 Eilmer of Malmesbury an Eleventh Century Aviator A Case Study of Technological Innovation Its Context and Tradition Technology and Culture 2 2 p 97 111 100 Ibn Firnas was a polymath a physician a rather bad poet the first to make glass from stones quartz a student of music and inventor of some sort of metronome A Brief History of the Metronome Franz Manufacturing Company Inc Archived from the original on 2010 03 24 Retrieved 2010 04 02 The Metronome The Harmonicon Volume 8 1830 Noorduin Marten 2020 Why Do We Need Another Recording of Beethoven s Ninth Symphony Symphony No 9 Benjamin Zander Discusses Beethoven s Ninth Symphony Rebecca Evans sop Patricia Bardon mezzo sop Robert Murray ten Derek Welton bass bar Philharmonia Chorus and Orchestra Stefan Bevier chorus master Benjamin Zander cond Brattle Media 610877733781 3 CDs 58 minutes music 159 minutes discussion Notes and discussion in English Nineteenth Century Music Review 1 9 doi 10 1017 S1479409820000026 ISSN 1479 4098 Dictionary of Tempo Markings Search Results for metronome Matthew Hindson hindson com au Archived from the original on 2014 04 26 a b Paterson R 2006 Standard Metronome Timings and Ratios Retrieved 2020 07 04 Mondal Himel Mondal Shaikat 2018 07 01 Applicability of android application based metronome in physiological tests International Journal of Health amp Allied Sciences 7 3 Gersten J 2017 10 11 The Beat Goes On A Short History of the Metronome WQXR Retrieved 2020 07 04 Patent US2715841A Drive mechanism for electric metronomes or the like Big list of Windows and Online Metronomes Bounce Metronome robertinventor com Archived from the original on 2012 07 24 metronome Google Search www google com Retrieved 2019 05 14 Getting to the heart of Ravel s opera double bill Archived 2017 09 09 at the Wayback Machine by Sanjoy Roy The Guardian 17 August 2012 Flowers in the Dirt 1993 Reissue CD booklet credited as Metronome and body percussion 1995 Remastered and Expanded Edition CD booklet liner notes Baker Kenneth In out of sync with William Kentridge s Time Archived 2013 12 13 at the Wayback Machine SFGate com November 6 2013 Retrieved 2013 12 08 a b A Practical Guide To Twentieth Century Violin Etudes With Performance And Theoretical Analysis Archived 2010 06 28 at the Wayback Machine by Aaron M Farrell a b Hoffman Miles 1997 The NPR Classical Music Companion Terms and Concepts from A to Z Houghton Mifflin Harcourt ISBN 978 0618619450 Steven Mauk Make the Metronome Your Friend PDF ithaca edu Archived PDF from the original on 2010 06 16 Metronome Techniques Uses of the Metronome www franzmfg com Archived from the original on 2011 07 11 Metronome Techniques Uses of the Metronome www franzmfg com Archived from the original on 2011 07 11 a b Refashioning Rhythm Hearing Acting and Reacting to Metronomic Sound in Experimental Psychology and Beyond c 1875 1920 by Alexander Bonus see also a b The end of early music a period performer s history of music for the twenty first century Archived 2011 06 04 at the Wayback Machine page 49 Oxford University Press by Bruce Haynes The end of early music a period performer s history of music for the twenty first century Archived 2011 06 04 at the Wayback Machine page 57 Oxford University Press by Bruce Haynes Overcoming Romanticism On the modernization of twentieth century performance practice by Chapter 3 contribution to Music and Performance During the Weimar Republic Archived 2016 03 04 at the Wayback Machine Cambridge University Press November 2005 Metronomic society Natural rhythms and human timetables 1988 by Michael Young see also review incl image by Ingram Pinn Franz Petersilea On rudimental instruction on the piano translated from Neue Zeitschrift fur Musik Vol 50 No 3 11 16 by G A Schmitt On Music p 413The New Monthly Magazine and Literary Journal Volume 7 1823 A musical biography or Sketches of the lives and writings of eminent musical characters compiled by John R Parker Stone amp Fovell 1825 Noorduin Marten August 2018 Re examining Czerny s and Moscheles s Metronome Marks for Beethoven s Piano Sonatas Nineteenth Century Music Review 15 2 209 235 doi 10 1017 S1479409817000027 ISSN 1479 4098 S2CID 193737315 Thoughts on Tempi Essays on the Origins of Western Music David Whitwell Archived from the original on 2008 04 09 quotes from Beethoven Berlioz and Liszt are referenced here Justin London Pulse In Grove Music Online Oxford Music Online accessed July 28 2008 Understanding the Samba Groove by Pedro Batista original alt 1 Archived 2012 03 23 at the Wayback Machine alt 2 Analyzing the earliest pre 1930 samba recordings e g Pelo Telefone from 1917 reveals strong differences with many of today s samba performances many of which have a very different sterile modernist metronomic corrupted rhythm The Amateur String Quartet Archived 2017 01 06 at the Wayback Machine by James Brown III The Musical Times Vol 68 No 1014 August 1 1927 Fundamentals of Piano Practice free online piano lessons learn teach piano www pianopractice org Archived from the original on 2010 07 10 Source from The Tyranny of the Bar Line by Daniel Gregory Mason The New Music Review and Church Music Review vol 9 American Guild of Organists 1909 How do you teach the difference between counting rhythm and musical rhythm Archived 2010 10 28 at the Wayback Machine Frederick Franz revised by Jon Truelson Metronome Techniques Archived 2012 06 03 at the Wayback Machine Andrew Lewis s Rhythm What it is and how to improve your sense of it Archived 2012 12 06 at the Wayback Machine especially his book 2 How to improve your sense of rhythm Archived 2012 12 06 at the Wayback Machine ISBN 0975466704 Mac Santiago Beyond the metronome Archived 2012 12 21 at the Wayback Machine ISBN 1450731945 Niedt D The Metronome is Your Friend Retrieved 2020 07 04 Mac Santiago Beyond the metronome Archived 2012 12 21 at the Wayback Machine see Lesson 4 Rhythmony Tom Hess music corporation How To Practice Guitar Effectively With And Without A Metronome Archived 2012 10 28 at the Wayback Machine StudyBass interactive online lessons Keeping The Beat Archived 2012 01 19 at the Wayback Machine Max Krimmel guitar builder Online Metronome Course Archived 2012 11 06 at the Wayback Machine Mac Santiago Beyond the metronome Archived 2012 12 21 at the Wayback Machine see Chapter 3 The Diminishing Click particularly Mac Santiago Beyond the metronome Archived 2012 12 21 at the Wayback Machine see Lesson 7 Being Inchronouse around the Click Andrew Lewis Book 4 Rhythm in Performance Archived 2012 12 06 at the Wayback Machine see the section on Fluidity and Flexibility and the various Flexibility exercises particularly Andrew Lewis Book 2 How to Improve your Sense of Rhythm Archived 2012 12 06 at the Wayback Machine see the section on Improving Pulse and Rhythm Through Motion and Action particularly Mac Santiago Beyond the Metronome 2010 Chapter 8 page 39 a b c Andrew Lewis Rhythm What it is and How to Improve Your Sense of It Archived 2012 12 06 at the Wayback Machine book II How to Improve Your Sense of Rhythm A practical step by step guide to developing and strengthening rhythm and inner pulse page 55 Improving Pulse and Rhythm Using Nature and Aspects of Daily Life Griffiths Jay 15 March 2011 Songs and freedom in West Papua The Guardian Archived from the original on 10 October 2017 a b Marianne Ploger and Keith Hill The Craft of Musical Communication Archived 2013 01 21 at the Wayback Machine Orphei Organi Antiqui 2005External links Edit Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Metronome Media related to Metronomes at Wikimedia Commons Quotations related to Metronome at WikiquoteResearch by Alexander Evan Bonus The Metronomic Performance Practice A History of Rhythm Metronomes and the Mechanization of Musicality PhD Thesis by Alexander E Bonus May 2010 A Timely Musical Discourse or A Music Treatise from Lost Times Part I Current Musicology 95 by Alexander E Bonus March 2013 Metronome Oxford Handbooks Online by Alexander E Bonus April 2014 Maelzel the Metronome and the Modern Mechanics of Musical Time The Oxford Handbook of Time in Music by Alexander E Bonus December 2021 Beethoven s Tempo Indications PhD Thesis by Marten Noorduin July 2016 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Metronome amp oldid 1144828899, wikipedia, 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