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- Brand new Cherub WMT-280 3in1(Tuner, Metronome and Tone generator) Digital LCD Rhythm Trainer is a high quality gadget and will keep your musical notes on beat and accurate.
- Device with 20ms response time, steady detection and accurate tuning.
- A built-in speaker allows you to hear the beat and tones.
- Multiple rhythms make WMT-280 more than just another typical metronome.
- This WMT-280 rhythm trainer is very helpful to horn players, string instruments, woodwinds and any other instrument is hard to play in tune.
Brand new Cherub WMT-280 3in1(Tuner, Metronome and Tone generator) Digital LCD Rhythm Trainer is a high quality gadget and will keep your musical notes on beat and accurate. Device with 20ms response time, steady detection and accurate tuning. A built-in speaker allows you to hear the beat and tones. Multiple rhythms make WMT-280 more than just another typical metronome. This WMT-280 rhythm trainer is very helpful to horn players, string instruments, woodwinds and any other instrument is hard to
Price:

- Keep the right tempo by using this metronome for your Android device
- Select the tempo by turning the Z-wheel with haptic feedback
- Hear the first beat accent
- Disable screen locking
- Choose your favorite color
List Price: $ 0.00
Price: $ 0.00
More Digital Metronome Products

- Tempo range 30-250bmp
- 88-note generator
- Volume control; Turning dial
- 3.5mm earphone jack
- 9V battery included (also equipped for use with AC Adapter, not included)
Scroll through electronic functions with an easy-to-use metronome packed with features at a breakthrough price! Features 0-9 beats and 6 rhythms with 3 different tones (chime, drum, and wood block) to clarify subdivisions, volume control, 3.5mm earphone jack, turning dial, and an 88-note generator! 9V battery included (also equipped for use with AC Adapter, not included). Tempo range 30-250bmp.
List Price: $ 14.99
Price: $ 14.99
Find More Digital Metronome Products

- Meters and Beat Subdivisions
- 30-250 bpm
- 3-Level Volume Control
Musedo is a leader in making compact, reliable tuners and metronomes that are incredibly accurate, easy to use and have a remarkably affordable price.
List Price: $ 16.99
Price: $ 16.99
Some cool Digital Metronome images:
Marketful of Color

Image by Tony the Misfit
About Union Square:
"Union Square, New York City, exhibits a diverse and exotic marketplace each day.
Union Square Park (also known as Union Square) is an important and historic intersection in New York City, located where Broadway and the Bowery came together in the early 19th century; its name does not celebrate the federal union but rather denotes the fact that "here was the union of the two principal thoroughfares of the island"[4] and the confluence of several trolley lines, as in the term "union station." Today it is bounded by 14th Street to the south, Union Square West on the west side, 17th Street on the north, and on the east Union Square East, which links together Broadway and Park Avenue South to Fourth Avenue and the continuation of Broadway. The park is under the aegis of the New York City Department of Parks and Recreation.
Neighborhoods around the park are the Flatiron District to the north, Chelsea to the west, Greenwich Village and New York University to the south, and Gramercy to the east. Also nearby is The New School. The eastern side of the square is dominated by the Zeckendorf Towers, the south side by One Union Square (1999) voted New York’s Ugliest Building by a panel of architects assembled by the New York Post. It features a kinetic wall sculpture and digital clock expelling bursts of steam, titled Metronome.
Union Square is noted for its impressive equestrian statue of George Washington, modeled by Henry Kirke Brown and unveiled in 1856, the first public sculpture erected in New York since the equestrian statue of George III in 1770 and the first American equestrian sculpture cast in bronze. Other statues in the park include the Marquis de Lafayette, modeled by Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi and dedicated at the Centennial, July 4, 1876, Abraham Lincoln, modeled by Henry Kirke Brown (1870), and the James Fountain (1881), a Temperance fountain with the figure of Charity who empties her jug of water, aided by a child; it was donated by Daniel Willis James and sculpted by Adolf Donndorf. A newer addition is a statue of Mahatma Gandhi in the southwest corner of the park, added in 1986, to mark Union Square’s history of social activism."
source: wiki
Desk

Image by Beige Alert
The stuff on/near my desk at home.
Question by bassatom: How do I use a metronome?
I have a digital metronome.
how do I use it to practice a lick for speed on the guitar, say a 4 note lick like 5787 on the 1st string?
there’s a button to adjust the time sugnature like 1/4,2/4,4/4 timing, and there’s one to adjust the note value from a quaver to demisemiquaver…….can someone guide me ?
Best answer:
Answer by pomotjni Put the metronome on 60,and go through a small part of the music (depending on your skills,and level of music,this may be a few measures,one measure,or a few notes,even one note).Make all notes whole notes,that is,take 4 clicks for each note.
During the 4 clicks you are waiting,prepare for the next move.Check to make sure everything is relaxed,and your fingers are in position waiting for next note.
If everything goes well,increase metronome speed on 80,and repeat.Then do it again for 100 and 120 at 4 clicks per note.
Then continue above procedure but with 2 clicks at 60,80,100 and 120.
Then same as above but 1 click per note.
Continue with 4 notes per click.At some point, it will be easy to do the passage with the correct rhythm instead of even note values.
This method will enable you to avoid the common situation of trying to play something too fast,too soon.
Add your own answer in the comments!
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