Question:
What exactly is Metronome?
Brittney H
2008-08-26 18:51:34 UTC
In the song No Handle bars he says something about metronome. What exactly does it mean?
Five answers:
HoneyB
2008-08-26 18:57:22 UTC
Metronome - Clicking pendulum indicates the exact tempo of a piece of music..... A device used by musicians to help keep correct tempo. The mechanical metronome is an upside-down pendulum that emits audible clicks with each stroke. Its tempo can be adjusted by moving a counterweight on the pendulum. See source for picture of device.
NH Guy
2008-08-26 18:58:01 UTC
A metronome is a device that helps someone to keep time to music. It usually makes a sound on a regular basis (on a beat), and sometimes has a part that moves back and forth to give a visual cue as to the beat.



See the link for more info.



The lyrics of the song are shown at the second link. Basically, they are saying that they can do things without help - they can do anything. One lyric is that they can keep a beat without the use of a metronome.
d_r_siva
2008-08-27 06:54:44 UTC
A device used to mark time by means of regularly recurring ticks or flashes at adjustable intervals.



[Greek metron, measure + Greek nomos, rule, division.]



Music Encyclopedia: Metronome



An apparatus for establishing musical tempo: more specifically the clockwork-driven double-pendulum device perhaps invented about 1812 by D. N. Winkel but refined and patented by J. N. Maelzel in 1815. Its distinct main purposes are to establish an appropriate tempo for a piece and to establish consistency of tempo through a work or an exercise. In the 20th century, synchronization in commercial music has brought the need for more sophisticated mechanisms. The metronome appears as a musical instrument in its own right in works by Ravel, Villa-Lobos and Ligeti.



Columbia Encyclopedia: metronome

(mĕ'trənōm') , in music, originally pyramid-shaped clockwork mechanism to indicate the exact tempo in which a work is to be performed. It has a double pendulum whose pace can be altered by sliding the upper weight up or down. The sliding bob indicates the rate of oscillation by means of calibrations on the pendulum. A number to indicate the rate at which the metronome is to be set and a note whose value is to equal one beat of the metronome are often given on a piece of music, preceded by the initials MM, for Mälzel's Metronome—Johann Mälzel (1772–1838) having made in 1816 the type of metronome in general use today.



A metronome is any device that produces a regulated audible and/or visual pulse, usually used to establish a steady beat, or tempo, measured in beats-per-minute (BPM) for the performance of musical compositions. It is an invaluable practice tool for musicians that goes back hundreds of years.



The metronome was invented by Dietrich Nikolaus Winkel in Amsterdam in 1812. Johann Mälzel copied several of Winkel's construction ideas and received the patent for the portable metronome in 1816. Ludwig van Beethoven was the first well-known composer to indicate specific metronome markings in his music, in 1817, but many performances of his music still vary widely from his tempo indications, particularly in slow movements.



Musicians use metronomes when they practice in order to maintain an established tempo; by adjusting the metronome, facility is achieved at varying tempi. Even in pieces that do not require strict time (see rubato), a metronome is used to give an indication of the general tempo intended by the composer. Many pieces provide a tempo indication at the top of the manuscript.



One common type of metronome is the wind-up metronome, which uses an adjustable weight on the end of a rod to control the tempo: slide the weight up the rod to decrease tempo, or down the rod to increase tempo. The pendulum rod swings back and forth in tempo; mechanics inside the metronome produce a clicking sound on each swing of the rod.



Most modern metronomes are electronic, with 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 can also produce a tuning note (usually A440 hertz). They range from simple credit-card sized devices to the complicated "Dr. Beat", manufactured by Boss, which can play polyrhythms and can "count aloud", using a sampled voice.



Sophisticated metronomes can produce two or more distinct sounds. A regular "tick" sound indicates the beat within each measure, and another, distinct sound (often of a different timbre, higher pitch and/or greater volume) indicates the beginning of each measure. A tempo control adjusts the amount of time separating each beat (typically measured in beats per minute), while another, discrete, control adjusts the meter of the rhythm and thus the number of beats in each measure. This number is an integer often ranging from one to six, though some metronomes go up to nine or higher. Some devices also have options for irregular time signatures such as 5/4 or 7/8, in which other distinct sounds indicate the beginning of each subgroup of beats within a measure.



http://www.answers.com/main/ntquery?s=Metronome
joseph b
2008-08-26 19:02:47 UTC
They use that word in the song called "handle bars". Check it out.
Sarah
2008-08-26 18:58:32 UTC
a device or software function that produces a discrete pulse. used to synchronize music with a specific tempo.





heres a pic:



http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/0a/Metronome_(pendulum_swinging).jpg


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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