Meanspeed® Music Review

Entries tagged as ‘Revolver’

The Speed of Loneliness – Green Day rocks to a Lonely Tempo with elegant contempt – "Boulevard Of Broken Dreams" – from AMERICAN IDIOT

June 20, 2009 · Leave a Comment

The Boulevard of Broken Dreams is a contemporary piece of music by Green Day. The song, though released years ago, becomes more popular each day, holding at Google’s #7 on the trend list.

Meanspeed-Spencer Summary
song=”The Boulevard Of Broken Dreams”
performer=Green Day
composer=Billie Joe Armstrong, Mike Dirnt, Tre Cool/Mike Dirnt, Billie Joe, Tré Cool
total time elapsed=2,198.23 seconds
total beat measured=3,060 beats
average number of beats per trial=340
average time per trial=244.24777 seconds
meanspeed/average velocity/standard tempo=83.5 beats per minute
emotive speed territory according to meanspeed music theory=loneliness
average beat=0.718 seconds
album=America Idiot
Size=8.1 MB
Bit Rate=258 kbps
Sample Rate=44.100 kHz
Volume (-13.0 dB)
File type=m4a
Profile=Low Complexity
Channels=Stereo
Encoded with iTunes v7.5, Quick Time 7.3.1

Boulevard-of-Broken-Dreams-Speed-of-Loneliness-universal-standard-tempo-map-7-Green-Day-772502_2

Boulevard-of-Broken-Dreams-Speed-of-Loneliness-universal-standard-tempo-map-7-Green-Day-772502_2

Boulevard of Broken Dreams - meanspeed music school psychology of tempo map 1

Boulevard of Broken Dreams - meanspeed music school psychology of tempo map 1

Boulevard-of-Broken-Dreams-Speed-of-Loneliness-universal-standard-tempo-map-22-Green-Day-700487_2

Boulevard-of-Broken-Dreams-Speed-of-Loneliness-universal-standard-tempo-map-22-Green-Day-700487_2

meanspeed music school
/John Andrew Newman/
6/20/09

Boulevard-of-Broken-Dreams-Speed-of-Loneliness-universal-standard-tempo-map-22-Green-Day-700487

Boulevard-of-Broken-Dreams-Speed-of-Loneliness-universal-standard-tempo-map-22-Green-Day-700487

John Andrew Newman
Meanspeed Music School
June 20, 2009

Categories: International Language · Mathematical Psychology · Music Psychology · Neurology · Psychology · Rhythm · Speed · Tempo · Tempo · music
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Macca’s BAND ON THE RUN – A two-part invention, part one at the speed of loneliness, part two releases at 132 bpm.

June 8, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Pat Metheny used to begin every concert just like this song – though probably not for any reason that he knew, but, then again, only he knows: the sound system would play THE WAY OF THE WORLD by Earth Wind & Fire , a song at the speed of loneliness. Then for over 15 years the lights would go down and the speed would literally BREAK – in Pat’s case to PHASE DANCE, which traveled through the speeds of renewal, enthusiasm, and comfort.

Macca here does the same thing. A neat trick – try playing Eminem’s STAN or Dido’s THANK YOU and then *break* the speed.

Wikipedia.org offers information at
URL=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Band_on_the_Run_%28song%29

“‘Band on the Run‘ is the title song from Paul McCartney and Wings‘ acclaimed Band on the Run album, one of McCartney’s most ambitious and best-loved songs. It is comprised of a three-part structure that revolves around the themes of escape and liberation.

The song features prominently on every McCartney/Wings best-of compilation and in McCartney’s live shows. The song was considered the best evidence that McCartney’s muse had not deserted him after The Beatles.

George Harrison had contributed the line in the middle section “If we ever get out of here.

A part of the middle section would later be sampled by Tone Lōc on his 1989 track “Cutting Rhythms”, but had to be removed as permission was not given.

Eve Of Summer remixed it in 2007, for their album ‘7′.”

all charts by Ian Schneider, James Andrew Newan
© 2007-2009. all rights reserved.

There are many ways to say this, and I guess I a the Doctor of Redundancy.  I only present the same points in graphics and digitization that continue to become not only more accurate but easier to view.  I’ve seen a lot of my older work on other sites, which is cool.  Then I see it done in film loops and in flash presentation which frankly outdid what I had done.  Here – same game – Paul Macca & Wings play the speed of lonley and desperate – 82 bpm – and break with a f major seventh –>Bb major seventh very wet 132 beats per minute thing.  Always works.  Been preaching that for, like, 21 years now – embarrassing – I don’t know for you, for me, or the madness that lies between.

A Stanford University Professor has compared himself to the man who discovered DNA:

Francis Crick – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Biology

Francis Harry Compton Crick OM FRS (8 June 1916 – 28 July 2004) was an English molecular biologist, physicist, and neuroscientist, who is most noted for

McCartney_Band_On_The-Run_speed-graph-pp23

McCartney_Band_On_The-Run_speed-graph-pp23

McCartney_Band_On_The-Run_expression-speed-emotion-music-val

McCartney_Band_On_The-Run_expression-speed-emotion-music-val
McCartney_Band_On_The-Run_emotional-psychology-music-pjprs

McCartney_Band_On_The-Run_emotional-psychology-music-pjprs

  • McCartney-Band-On-The-Run-time-and-self-control-rshlprs

    McCartney-Band-On-The-Run-time-and-self-control-rshlprs

    McCartney_Band_On_The-Run_speed-graph-2311

    McCartney_Band_On_The-Run_speed-graph-2311
    McCartney-Band-On-The-Run-mean-speed-theory-pp

    McCartney-Band-On-The-Run-mean-speed-theory-pp


    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francis_Crick – 175k –

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Categories: International Language · Music Psychology · Neurology · Psychology · Rhythm · Tempo · Tempo
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FRANK SINATRA SMOOTH: “When I was seventeen, it was a very good year!” – IT WAS A VERY GOOD YEAR – speed=71.8 bpm, the speed of grace. Full Obama-Tempo Analysis, meanspeed charts, classic YouTube performances

June 2, 2009 · Leave a Comment

bpm graph - complete, consecutive, contiguous - meanspeed music school.

bpm graph - complete, consecutive, socntiguous - meanspeed music school.

Does Tempo Indicate That Which We Emote?

Frank Sinatra’s ultra-classic It Was A Very Good Year was written in the hard, gloomy, haunted key of D minor, and juxtaposed with the most graceful of all speeds. The result is a masterpiece, spanning the generational divide between when my grandfather jack was born in Hoboken, almost 108 years ago, and this morning, where an excellent CNN video montage featured the “Best of 2007″ with Frank’s song in the background.


Although the average and the mean speed of this song lies in the speed territory range of Grace, we see each emotion. categories of emotion within a speed territory have been called “mean emotions.” We have found that on a consistently excellent basis the song found with an average tempo between 70-76 beats per minute emote grace.

From Ian Schneider, Esq.

What could be more graceful than that of a Chairman, going through nearly every speed (no drum machine for Frank, baby!): sublime, melodramatic, sincere, ceremonial, graceful, bittersweet, lonely and renewal.

Then again, what would one expect from that of a late Frank Sinatra, singing about the entirety of his life? The emotion is all over the place, but sum it up or find the mean, and here: Pure Grace of Frank.

The charts are mean speed of 13 takes—and because of the orchestra, the syncopations, Frank’s unique rapport with his orchestra: no doubt the most difficult song I’ve ever calibrated.

Take a look at the graph featuring the photograph of Frank Sinatra as Major Marco in the Manchurian Candidate. Seems that The Chairman cannot escape grace.

/Ian Andrew Schneider/
meanspeed music school
June 2, 2009

 

Categories: BPM · Education · International Language · Mathematical Psychology · Music Genome Project · Music Psychology · Music Tempo · Neurology · PoC · Psychology · Rhythm · STOP INTELLECTUAL THIEVES · Science of Music · Self-Help · Sound Conditioning · Speed · Speed of Grace · Tempo · Tempo Graphic · Timing · WIKIBPM · WikiTempo · beats per minute · iTunes · meanspeed constant · music · music psychology · self-comfort · self-help · sluggish cognitive tempo · tempo map
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