Inexpensive Metronome Suggestions?
07:47 on Wednesday, November 8, 2006
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Pickled (123 points)
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I don't currently have a metronome, and have to say that I really don't feel the need for one myself. My watch has always been sufficient. OTOH, I have suspected that my son might benefit from one (he seems to have inherited his father's sense of rhythm, rather than mine ), and his new trombone teacher confirmed that last night.
I don't want to spend a lot, as I want him to be able to carry it with him to lessons. I was looking on the Fluteworld site and found this one:
http://www.fluteworld.com/index.php?action=prod&wart=13728
It's a Seiko-DM50. Does anyone have this one? How is it? This one will do various rhythms (8th, 16th, triplet) with beat accents, which is probably the function he needs the most. Any other recommendations in the $30 range?
--Judy
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Re: Inexpensive Metronome Suggestions?
09:51 on Wednesday, November 8, 2006
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Re: Inexpensive Metronome Suggestions?
09:56 on Wednesday, November 8, 2006
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Re: Inexpensive Metronome Suggestions?
10:17 on Wednesday, November 8, 2006
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Re: Inexpensive Metronome Suggestions?
10:46 on Wednesday, November 8, 2006
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Pickled (123 points)
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OK, good suggestions. I think we're going to trek down to the music store on Friday, since he has the day off, and see if either of these is available for instant gratification, or at least to examine in person--otherwise, I'll order online.
Now another question, which may show my age and the fact that my last metronome was a wind-up Seth Thomas style. How easy to operate are the metronomes you recommended? The Dr. Beat says that it "handles time signatures up to 17 beats per measure"--doesn't a metronome simply give you a beat (or a split beat, i.e. triplets, 8ths, etc) at a certain rate per minute? Or am I missing something here? He is 10--is it fairly simple so that he can look at a piece of music and program it himself? Or is this question like my mother and her fear of the VCR, when the children knew how to use it at age 3? IOW, if he can use a Gameboy or play a complicated computer game, is this not even worth worrying about?
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Re: Inexpensive Metronome Suggestions?
10:57 on Wednesday, November 8, 2006
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Re: Inexpensive Metronome Suggestions?
10:58 on Wednesday, November 8, 2006
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Re: Inexpensive Metronome Suggestions?
00:39 on Thursday, November 9, 2006
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Re: Inexpensive Metronome Suggestions?
01:03 on Thursday, November 9, 2006
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Re: Inexpensive Metronome Suggestions?
05:29 on Thursday, November 9, 2006
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Pickled (123 points)
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>>A good thing to have around the house is a pendulum metronome. They are generally too large to lose, but do come in various sizes, can serve as decoration (various wood or even animal designs), and do not require batteries so that they will always be accessible as a good backup.
<<
Oh, that was on my Christmas list last year. I just didn't get it, and haven't bothered to buy one myself. It's going back on this year, or I may just buy one. I will probably get the mahogany one, but the cat is rather tempting.
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Re: Inexpensive Metronome Suggestions?
12:21 on Saturday, November 11, 2006
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