The LIveBPM phone app is handy for checking band speed on the go - our band
uses it sometimes if we want to doublecheck our feeling that we're playing
too fast or slow.
Meg
(Chicago area)
On Thu, Sep 5, 2024 at 8:19 AM Mary Collins via Contra Callers <
contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
Thanks Kat for this bpm mention. I try to notated all
my cards (as I
call/practice) with the type of tune and the practice tune (sometimes I
call to recorded so this helps) and the best bpm. Sometimes I note a start
at and increase to as well.
I attended a workshop once where I was instructed to stomp out the bpm
instead of telling the band. Very difficult for me for a variety of reasons
but I was told bands don't know bpm which I (on behalf of musicians
everywhere) took exception to. My response was, "well, the bands I work
with, do."
Good information re: beats vs measures too. I have tried for years to
explain to a dancer that more notes does not = more beats and more steps.
Loving all the comments!
Mary Collins
On Thu, Sep 5, 2024, 8:17 AM Katherine Kitching via Contra Callers <
contracallers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
I'm loving this discussion too!
It took me a while when I started calling, to realize how the dancers and
the musicians count differently--
In our group we always listen to a full added-on A1 as an intro- ie 16
beats of music-- and that's what I tell our beginner dancers: "We're going
to listen to 16 beats of music and then start dancing" .
But what the musicians seem to need to hear, if they are new to our
group, is "We need you to play 8 *bars* of extra music as an intro" .
Until I figured this out, I was asking the musicians for 16 beats, and
they were playing 16 bars, and everything got messy!
But Rich's comment below has got me interested in hearing from more
people about their typical range of tempos- it's something I've recently
started thinking more deeply about--
Now when I do my dance outline, I set a target tempo in bpm for each
dance, to help our musicians select an appropriate tune for each (I went to
a great workshop last summer where I learned that some tunes, like irish
reels, sound fast but actually tend to be among the slower-tempo'd tunes --
and most of our musicians struggle to play them faster than 110bpm- making
them a poor choice for a lot of the simple, high-energy dances that our
group does.)
Rich Goss wrote:
"The sweet spot for most dances is 116bpm (beats per minute). The range
is generally 108-120. For a one night stand, I would shoot for the low
end."
So I've been keeping track over the last year, -- asking my bands to
report to me after each dance, whether we danced at the target tempo I had
set, or something faster or slower than it...
I would say in our group, our typical easy dances run with a tempo of
112-120 - even for total beginners..
and some dances in the middle of the evening get up to 125+, with all the
high energy in the hall.
It's actually our more challenging dances towards the end of the evening,
(which are not very challenging for most of y'all, but we are a basic-level
group!) that end up going slower- when we put in heys and other flowy
moves, then we get into more groovy-feeling tunes in the 105-110bpm range.
Would love to hear about other groups' tempo ranges!
Kat K in Halifax, NS, Canada
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