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3 Reasons to Use a Metronome

3 Reasons to Use a Metronome

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In music, just as in life, consistency matters. There may be times when improvisation, spontaneity, and drawing outside the lines is warranted, but keeping at a steady pace often yields success. For musicians, the most useful tool for maintaining an even pace is a metronome.

A metronome, like a clock, is a device that ticks at a specific, consistent rate. Unlike a clock, however, this rate doesn’t need to tick at 60 beats per minute (BPM). Instead, the BPM can be changed. Naturally, the larger the BPM, the faster the tempo, and vice versa.

In the past, analog metronomes were used by musicians to practice their timing and consistency. Today, metronomes, or “clicks/click tracks,” are built right into recording software and can be adjusted digitally. Here are three reasons why these click tracks are so important for practicing, playing, and recording.

1. Improve Your Playing With a Metronome

When recording, you can attempt as many takes as you need for the part to sound good and be on time. However, if you aren’t prepared to record to a perfect beat you risk wasting precious time in the recording process. Making mistakes is okay, but in a world where time is money and many studios charge by the hour, it’s important to need few takes.

Practicing to a click track can help prepare you for recording. The more you play to a steady beat, the better your brain will get at recognizing steady time, regardless of whether a click is present. Additionally, if you ever wish to record live with a full band, you and your fellow musicians will all need to stay on time together.

2. Tight, Clean Recordings

Using click tracks is the industry standard for recordings. While it’s true some well-known albums were tracked without the aid of a metronome, you’ll rarely hear such a thing today. Our brains enjoy hearing the precision of songs tracked to a perfect beat. Even if your music frequently changes time signatures and features polyrhythmic sections, all the more reason to employ a click track. Without one, you risk confusing the listener at every transition.

Metronomes also make post-production much easier when it comes to synchronization. For instance, after a drummer has recorded a song, there might be a few minor errors here and there. While some of these errors might sound good and natural, others might need some adjustment. If a kick or snare is just a tad early or late, these can be moved in the DAW. With a click track, you’ll know exactly where to move these notes, so long as the rest of the drums are relatively in place.

3. Developing a Song

Every musician writes music differently. But today with the advent of recording software many begin by laying down ideas in their DAW. If these ideas are initially tracked to a click, you might realize the song is too slow or too fast. Then, once you decide on the proper tempo, you can use your rough outline as a template for your true recording. The click will already be in place for you, as will the other rough tracks you recorded. This makes writing a song and recording ideas more of a chiseling away than a blind build and tear down.

Conclusion

There are even more applications of metronomes in playing and recording, but these are the main ones. Tell us your opinions on click tracks as well as your experiences!

About the Author

Ethan Keeley

Ethan Keeley

Writer, Voice Talent, Musician, and Audio Editor

Ethan Keeley is a musician, voiceover talent, and writer from Rochester, New York. When he's not on tour with his band Unwill he's working on new songs and stories.

Comments

tolberttoz

Click tracks are essential. I believe people are afraid of them because they don’t know how to play “around” them. It takes a minute to sit with a tempo and adjust as needed to get the feel of all the sections and what the basic transitions are.

It really helps if you have a demo from a vocalist where… even though they might be banging something out to no click… that natural tempo is key… start there…

You may also have to think ahead if there’s a complete shift between parts… I had one like that recently where the chorus was requiring a slower tempo… falling into a “half-time” feel from the verse. But once you find it…it’s great and there’s always that reference…

Another secret is… better drum sounds hide the click feel…cheesier computer or old school drum machine samples that are totally quantized are just an extension of a rigid side stick click. Brutal. Some people misconstrue that as “tight”…

If you can get live instruments over programmed drums… that loosens up everything… it’s when you hear complete in the box instrumentation that is zero quantized to the drums with no real instruments…. you’re most likely reacting to the rigid feel…nothing breathes…personally I can’t take it.

I invite Everyone check out a few of the
Tracks at the link below…the song Let You Go has more of a drum machine feel that meanders into a live feel….so that was fun…but everything is done to a click…and not everything is quantized

Hey thanks for listening and letting me put in my 2 cents 😆

http://tolberttoz.bandcamp.com

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