luis jure wrote: >el Sat, 8 Mar 2003 14:01:32 +0400 >Guy Daniel CLOTILDE <guy.clotilde@xxxxxxxxxx> escribió: > > > >>On Tue, 4 Mar 2003 12:38:32 +0000 >>Tim Hall <tim@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote / a écrit: >> >> >> >>>each beat lasts 60/bpm seconds, >>> >>> >>I don't understand. Is it 60 bpm/s ? >> >> >> > > >no, it's 60/bpm > >you know bpm means "beats per minute", so the duration of a beat is: > >60 (seconds in a minute) >--- >bpm (number of beats in a minute) > >at a metronome marking of 60, each beats is a second long (60/60). >the higher the mm, the shorter each beat: for mm=120 each beat is 0.5 >seconds (60/120); for lower mm, beats are longer, for mm=40 each beat is >1.5 seconds (60/40) > > The way I look at the word "per" is to just turn it into a divisor sign, so that a 60 bpm song would be: 60 beats -------- minute a 120 bpm song is twice as fast, and hence has twice as many beats in a minute, etc. -Rich explanatory PS: 60/bpm would equal 60/beats/minute == 60 minutes/beat which would actually be 1/60 beat/minute , read as one sixtieth of a beat per minute. At least that's the way I would read it...