Your American History Reference Guide!
- Beats per minute

HistoryMania Information Site on Beats per minute American History American History Search        American History Browse welcome to our free resource site for all enthusiasts!

Beats per minute

Beats per minute (bpm) is a unit typically used as either a measure of tempo in music, or a measure of one's heart rate. A rate of 60 bpm means that one beat will occur every second. One bpm is equal to 1/60 Hz.

Beats per minute became common terminology in popular music during the disco era because of its usefulness to DJs, and remain important in dance music. Hip-hop uses a BPM tempo of 90-120, while house music is faster: 110 -140BPM. Jungle music goes even faster: 140-190, while Gabba tops it with above-200 BPM and Speedcore with 200-700 BPM.

Beatmixing, an art amongst DJs, concerns the speeding up or down of a record in order to match the BPM of a previous track so both can be flawlessly mixed. Normally, the pitch and BPM of a track are linked: spin a disc 10% faster and both pitch and tempo will be 10% higher. Software to change the pitch without changing the tempo, or vice-versa, is called time-stretching or pitch-shifting software. It works OK for small adjustments (+- 20%), but the result can be noisy and unmusical for larger changes.

BPM can be calculated by hand (count the number of downbeats/bass drums per 60 seconds, or - to be fast - per 15 seconds and multiply by 4), but some softwares like MixMeister, Traktor-DJ and PC-DJ can do it automatically.

External links

The contents of this article are licensed from Wikipedia.org under the
GNU Free Documentation License. How to see transparent copy
Search | Browse | Contact | Legal info