Metronome · Vivace / Presto

146 BPM Metronome

146 BPM is Vivace territory — very fast, driving, and intense. Each beat arrives every 410 ms, leaving very little room for hesitation or imprecision. This range is associated with punk rock, metal, fast pop, and drum and bass at its lower end. Running and sprinting playlist tempos cluster around 160–170 BPM because this pace synchronises naturally with fast footstrike cadence. For musicians, practising at 146 BPM is a serious technique challenge: rhythmic clarity, clean articulation, and consistent dynamics all require well-developed muscle memory. Use a speed trainer — start 20–30% slower and gradually ramp up — rather than jumping straight to 146 BPM from a standing start.

146
BPM · Vivace
▶ Open in metronome

What does 146 BPM feel like?

At 146 beats per minute, each beat arrives every 410 milliseconds. This maps to a fast run in step cadence. At 410 ms per beat, the tempo demands clean technique and solid muscle memory to play at without errors creeping in.

Songs and music at 146 BPM

Well-known music near this tempo includes 'Shake It Off' by Taylor Swift (~160 BPM), 'Don't Stop Me Now' by Queen (~156 BPM), fast pop and running playlists. Use the full MusoKit metronome to practice along with any of these — set it to 146 BPM, hit play, and start counting.

FAQs

What music is at 146 BPM?

The 146 BPM range includes fast pop like 'Shake It Off' by Taylor Swift (~160 BPM), 'Don't Stop Me Now' by Queen (~156 BPM), upbeat punk tracks, and most running workout playlists.

Is 146 BPM fast or slow?

146 BPM is very fast. Vivace in Italian means 'lively and vivid'. Running cadence playlists target 160–180 BPM, so this tempo matches a brisk run.

How accurate is this metronome?

The click uses the Web Audio API's sample-accurate scheduler. Even at very high BPMs the timing stays stable with under 1 ms drift per minute.

What is the Italian name for 146 BPM?

Vivace or Presto — meaning 'vivid' and 'quick' respectively. The exact boundary varies by source, but both indicate fast, energetic playing.

Can I use this for running cadence training?

Yes — many runners use a metronome to synchronise foot strikes. Set it to your target cadence (steps per minute, typically 160–180) and run in time with the click.

Related on MusoKit

Full metronomeTime signatures, subdivisions, tap tempo, and custom click sounds. BPM to millisecondsConvert 146 BPM into delay and LFO times for your DAW. Speed trainerAuto-ramp from slow to 146 BPM over any number of bars. Drum machineBuild a groove at 146 BPM with classic drum kits.