Top Comments
All Comments (11)
-
@ShittyMcPoopyBalls Fine with me.
-
@molomono Please stop
-
@ShittyMcPoopyBalls You are thinking the spacing between notes, but measures also have a pacing in which the duration of a measure is measured.
The second number in the division is the amount of pulses you divide the actual amount of notes in a measure with. So if that second variable is increased the amount of beats taking place is also increased, this means that a higher bpm becomes slower. Since more beats take place per measure.
It's hard to explain in 500 characters xD
-
@allmetaliswelcome i kinda do, what you were saying earlier made no sense, since 440 bpm 16th notes are physically impossible.
-
@ShittyMcPoopyBalls or you just don't get my point.
you can set a metronome at a certain amount of beats per minute. those beats aren't a specific subdivison. in common 4/4 time the pulse is on the quarter note, so you set your metronome to quarters, in 7/8 the pulse is on the eight notes, so it would make perfect sense to put in on eighth notes. hope you get what i'm saying
-
@allmetaliswelcome hahahahahaha nooooo. you got it wrong dude. if you wanted them to equal, then 16th notes at 110 is equal to 8th notes at 220. then 32nd notes would be 55bpm. quarter notes would be about 440.
-
@ShittyMcPoopyBalls with the original bpm thing, 220 bpm would be 220 quarter notes, 440 eighth notes, 880 sixteenth notes.
if it would be 220 eight notes per minute, it would be 220 eighth notes, 440 sixteenth notes. that's what i mean.
-
@allmetaliswelcome you mean instead of 16ths
when he said "let me play this at 220 BPM' i was like "oh jared don't hurt yourself!"
but i guess they play it at 220 eighth notes per minute instead of quarters
allmetaliswelcome 9 months ago 11