|
| quote: | Originally posted by ASFSE
well after a lot of browsing i stumbled upon a good little website.
it said that the method of counting to 15 and then mult. by 4 is an inaccurate way of calculating the BPM.
instead, it suggested that you use a stopwatch, count 40 beats, and on the 40th beat stop the stopwatch, take the time that you got, and then divide 2400 by the time you got.
i'm at work now, so i cant post the link to the site or give you any examples, but this seems like a more accurate approach than the 15x4 method. also, i tried a couple java applets, but they were really bad, and always screwed up no matter how long, or how many times i reset the thing. anyway, thanks for the help. |
That is a more accurate way to do it, and it will work, but it also takes longer and requires a stopwatch and calculator, whereas the 15x4 method you can do with nothing. And the big thing is that who cares if you're off by 1 bpm...you're just trying to get general numbers to categorize your tracks I'm assuming.
Also, I've been using that java applet for years, and it works great (other than sometimes it doesn't like to reset, so you just hit the refresh button on your browser instead of the java refresh button).
___________________
-Jon
www.DJjoncaserta.com - - mixes and whatnot (melodic progressive house and trance)
|