Metronome · Prestissimo

212 BPM Metronome

212 BPM is Prestissimo — the fastest tempo marking in classical music, reserved for virtuoso passages at the absolute limit of human performance. Each beat lasts only 283 ms. In modern music, this range is associated with extreme metal blast beats, grindcore, and some technical drum and bass. Playing cleanly at 212 BPM requires exceptional technical preparation: most musicians approach speeds like this through months of gradual incremental practice using a speed trainer, never jumping straight to the target tempo. For most genres, using a metronome at 212 BPM is more useful as a diagnostic tool — hearing exactly where in the beat you rush or drag — than as a direct practice tempo.

212
BPM · Prestissimo
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What does 212 BPM feel like?

At 212 beats per minute, each beat arrives every 283 milliseconds. At 283 ms per beat, this is one of the fastest practical tempos in music. Prestissimo is a showpiece speed requiring exceptional technical preparation.

Songs and music at 212 BPM

Well-known music near this tempo includes Extreme metal, grindcore, and the fastest Prestissimo passages in Paganini and Liszt. Use the full MusoKit metronome to practice along with any of these — set it to 212 BPM, hit play, and start counting.

FAQs

What music is at 212 BPM?

212 BPM is used in extreme metal blast beats, grindcore, and the most technically demanding virtuoso passages in classical music like Paganini and Liszt.

Is 212 BPM fast or slow?

212 BPM is at the absolute upper limit of practical music tempos. Prestissimo — the Italian marking for this range — literally means 'as fast as possible'.

How accurate is this metronome at extreme speeds?

The Web Audio API clock is sample-accurate regardless of BPM. It maintains under 1 ms precision even at 220 BPM — the timing is not the limit, your technique is.

What is the Italian name for 212 BPM?

Prestissimo — meaning 'as fast as possible'. It is the fastest tempo marking in standard classical notation.

How do I train to play this fast?

Use the MusoKit speed trainer to gradually ramp from a comfortable tempo to your target over weeks or months. Trying to play at full speed without preparation almost always builds incorrect technique.

Related on MusoKit

Full metronomeTime signatures, subdivisions, tap tempo, and custom click sounds. BPM to millisecondsConvert 212 BPM into delay and LFO times for your DAW. Speed trainerAuto-ramp from slow to 212 BPM over any number of bars. Drum machineBuild a groove at 212 BPM with classic drum kits.