What bpm can you maintain for a few hundred distinct, fretted notes?

What bpm can you maintain for a few hundred distinct, fretted notes?

  • 250 bpm

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • 300 bpm

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • 350 bpm

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • 400 bpm

    Votes: 2 28.6%
  • 450 bpm

    Votes: 1 14.3%
  • 500 bpm

    Votes: 2 28.6%
  • 550 bpm

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • 600+ bpm

    Votes: 2 28.6%

  • Total voters
    7

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Simpler or well practiced patterns such as runs up down and across the fretboard and speed drills, yes... but not "here's 20 bars of of open low E string", nope.

Call it idle curiosity. Thx


CLARIFICATION: PICKED NOTES PER MINUTE... NOT METRONOME SETTING/BACKGROUND DRUMBEAT KEEPING TIME
 
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Re: What bpm can you maintain for a few hundred distinct, fretted notes?

Maybe 100. But it would be an exercise in utter boredom if I tried it.

As speed goes up, interest goes down.
 
Re: What bpm can you maintain for a few hundred distinct, fretted notes?

Probably 300bpm.

I assume we're talking whole notes, right?
 
Re: What bpm can you maintain for a few hundred distinct, fretted notes?

Probably 300bpm.

I assume we're talking whole notes, right?

The same note value accorded to a "beat".... so,"pick strokes per minute", if you will

Or pick/finger strokes if you include bass
 
Re: What bpm can you maintain for a few hundred distinct, fretted notes?

Maybe 100. But it would be an exercise in utter boredom if I tried it.

As speed goes up, interest goes down.

Doubtful

For comparison, fast speed metal songs are a nominal 200-220+ "bpm" (quarter notes), but feature guitar solos with eighth and even sixteenth notes aplenty ... so 400 - 900ish notes per minute top speeds


4 times slower, maybe, but 9 times slower? Seems like you meant eighth or sixteenth notes at tempo (quarter note = 100 bpm)... so actually 200 or probably 400
 
Re: What bpm can you maintain for a few hundred distinct, fretted notes?

At one point I could do most of the semiquaver (quarter-note) exercises in Troy Stetina's Speed Mechanics for Lead Guitar close to 190 bpm, so let us say just over 700. At that point I thought that the speed was losing the cool factor, and I shall not claim that it was always equally clean. But I did do fast well at one point, and I have managed to build up again some of it.
 
Re: What bpm can you maintain for a few hundred distinct, fretted notes?

I have no clue and I don't have any desire to find out. With the nerve damage, it's just a blessing that I'm playing again. I'd sooner enter a johnson measuring contest than worry about bpm.
 
Re: What bpm can you maintain for a few hundred distinct, fretted notes?

I have no clue and I don't have any desire to find out. With the nerve damage, it's just a blessing that I'm playing again. I'd sooner enter a johnson measuring contest than worry about bpm.

Thats in fact more sophisitcated than this thread.
 
Re: What bpm can you maintain for a few hundred distinct, fretted notes?

They only time I feel the need to worry about how many notes I can pick a minute is when I'm tremolo picking. Other than that I find all those extra notes just crowd up my phrases.
 
Re: What bpm can you maintain for a few hundred distinct, fretted notes?

At one point I could do most of the semiquaver (quarter-note) exercises in Troy Stetina's Speed Mechanics for Lead Guitar close to 190 bpm, so let us say just over 700. At that point I thought that the speed was losing the cool factor, and I shall not claim that it was always equally clean. But I did do fast well at one point, and I have managed to build up again some of it.

This is my experience as well. Once you are able to do it, it's no longer fun.
 
Re: What bpm can you maintain for a few hundred distinct, fretted notes?

Playing hair metal means you need to fit as many notes into one solo. Solos tend to be between a measly billion notes to a couple septillion. And faster = better. 6000 bpm in cut time is my favorite.
 
Re: What bpm can you maintain for a few hundred distinct, fretted notes?

My top speed of “several” beets per minute is not sustainable, due to its reliance on fossil fuels and non-biodegradable petroleum-derived plastics.
 
Re: What bpm can you maintain for a few hundred distinct, fretted notes?

They only time I feel the need to worry about how many notes I can pick a minute is when I'm tremolo picking. Other than that I find all those extra notes just crowd up my phrases.

I don't care to measure right now, but tremolo picking the high E (and to a lesser extent B string) are my Achilles' Heel at the moment- I'm much faster on the bass strings for some reason.
 
Re: What bpm can you maintain for a few hundred distinct, fretted notes?

I don't care to measure right now, but tremolo picking the high E (and to a lesser extent B string) are my Achilles' Heel at the moment- I'm much faster on the bass strings for some reason.

IME it's harder to be consistent with thinner strings or less tension. The string "wiggles" too much. Maybe try to go up a gauge.
 
Re: What bpm can you maintain for a few hundred distinct, fretted notes?

These days I honestly don't know and don't really care. Before I got bored with metal, one of my rhythm guitar practice drills was to play along to Master of Puppets on repeat and see how many times I could play through the song without getting tired. I managed to get up to 3-4 repeats with no breaks before deciding that it just didn't interest me anymore.
 
Re: What bpm can you maintain for a few hundred distinct, fretted notes?

250-300. I have some songs in that range.


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Re: What bpm can you maintain for a few hundred distinct, fretted notes?

I can do the Yngwie 6 note (16th triplets) pattern at 100bpm. Any faster and it starts to fall apart.
 
What bpm can you maintain for a few hundred distinct, fretted notes?

I don't care to measure right now, but tremolo picking the high E (and to a lesser extent B string) are my Achilles' Heel at the moment- I'm much faster on the bass strings for some reason.

Look up Troy Grady’s “cracking the code” series on you tube. It’s amazing.

I’d be willing to bet that your picking mechanic is different on the lower strings.
 
Re: What bpm can you maintain for a few hundred distinct, fretted notes?

I don't know how much bpm's I can play but I know one thing for sure that it's not 2000 bpm's.;)




;>)/
 
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