TuneUniversal Guide

What is a metronome?

A metronome is a device that produces a steady pulse at a set tempo in BPM to help musicians keep consistent time.

The more you practise with a metronome, the stronger and more reliable your internal sense of rhythm becomes.

Online metronome

Continue from here

Use this page as a bridge to the practical tool, closely related guides and the matching tuning hub.

How it works

  1. 1.Choose a comfortable BPM.
  2. 2.Start the pulse and listen carefully.
  3. 3.Play or sing along.
  4. 4.Raise the speed only after several clean rounds.

BPM and tempo

BPM stands for beats per minute. 60 BPM means one beat per second; 120 BPM means two. The higher the number, the faster the tempo — most pop songs sit between 90 and 130 BPM.

Why a metronome helps practice

It makes rhythmic errors audible and correctable. Start slow, play cleanly, then raise the tempo — this is the most effective way to build reliable rhythm.

Tools

Practice with a precise, adjustable metronome — set BPM, time signature, and accents directly in your browser.

Online metronome

Related searches

Internal pages that naturally extend this guide.

Related questions

Short follow-up questions that make the next step clearer.

What is the next practical step?

After reading this guide, the most useful next step is to open the practical tool and apply the notes or tuning right away.

Online metronome

Should you compare nearby variants too?

It is worth comparing nearby guides or tunings so you can decide faster what to use in real practice.

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