Greatest Song at the speed of Loneliness, 79-84 bpm? Aerosmith: "Dream On," at 79 bpm - Contiguous calibrations exhibited with matched speed chart










Each of the speed charts above was produced by using the methodology as described on www.meanspeed.com.
This song is one of the greatest at the speed fo loneliness, 79-84 beats per minute. The only songs that are in this league at this speed
The group of speed charts, histograms, tempo maps - whatever, as same charts are called different words by various groups. What is cool? It works at every level. The "layperson" can instantly see the line of speed, the composer can check their composition against others, the D.J. can know the emotion of the vibe, the band can see who is going too fast or slow. Anything goes with this conjecture: a jail warden, for example, can do some peaceful things. As a triple We-Dare-You loop, try Kashmir by Led Zeppelin, Boulevard Of Broken Dreams by Green Day this song.
The clinical experiments are the accumulated measurements of 10 trials of the song.
Wikipedia, the free people's encyclopedia, features a fantastic article on the song at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dream_On_%28Aerosmith_song%29.
Ian Schneider
meanspeed.com
April 30, 2008
Labels: Aerosmith, American Idiot, Billie Joe Armstrong, Boulevard of Broken Dreams, Green Day, Jesus of Suburbia, Kashmir, Noel Gallagher, Oasis, Rob Cavallo, Steven Tyler, Wonderwall
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