Well, not exactly, IMHO.  It's good, as Nick and Jaroslaw have said, to
play with feeling and varying tempo when performing.  It's also good to
know when and why you're doing it, which is where a metronome, online or
hung from the ceiling, can be of use.  I've played for dancers a fair
amount, too, and it's surprising how much rhythmic variation you can get
away with.
C.

>>> Jaros*aw Lipski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 6/17/2008 6:26 PM >>>
Bravo, at last someone said it. Absolutely agree! The problem is that
so
many people want to play like a metronome
JL


-----Original Message-----
From: Nck Gravestock [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Wednesday, June 18, 2008 12:12 AM
To: Andrew Gibbs; Narada
Cc: Lute Mailing list
Subject: [LUTE] Re: Web metronome

Before getting too despondent about regularity and metronomes, bear in
mind
that the human pulse varies with respiration, and that music also has
to
breathe through phrasing. In fact playing even quite simple pieces are
best
when phrased with a sense of breathing as if to sing the next phrase
thus
losing that mechanical feeling of playing exactly in time. Only dance
music
played to be danced to is fairly strict, and a listen to venetian
waltzes
shows that is not always the case (not on the lute, those waltzes, I
hasten
to add)
Pieces played mechanically such as on a music box often do not sound
very
musical for that reason (though a good music box can be set up to have
rubato by the position of the pins, but that is not a topic for the
lute
list
nick


On 17/6/08 14:50, "Andrew Gibbs" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:

> I think it was on this list that someone gave Thomas Mace's
> instructions for a pendulum-like time-keeping device that consisted
> of a bullet tied to the end of a piece of string attached to the
> ceiling. Apparently it works...
> 
> 
> On 17 Jun 2008, at 14:32, Narada wrote:
> 
>> Wouldn't it be nice though to have a traditonal metronome, just to
>> keep in
>> flavour with it all. I wonder what they used back then? Had
clockwork
>> mechanism's been invented in the 1500's?  But I know what you mean,
>> when I
>> run my metronome on my recording studio, my timing is awful, must
>> be my age.
>> 
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Andrew Gibbs [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
>> Sent: 17 June 2008 14:15
>> To: Lutenet
>> Subject: [LUTE] Web metronome
>> 
>> 
>> I've been trying to play along with a metronome more often (even
>> though it's depressing to realise how unevenly I'm playing) and I
>> found this online metronome that's nice to use:
>> 
>> http://webmetronome.com 
>> 
>> and this one that's not as useful but simulates a real metronome:
>> 
>> http://simple.bestmetronome.com 
>> 
>> Andrew
> 
> 
> 
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