89 BPM Metronome
89 BPM is Andante — the 'walking pace' of music. Each beat lands every 674 ms, which is close to a relaxed human footstep. This is one of the most natural tempos for the human body: your resting heart rate, a comfortable stroll, and the default pace of a huge number of folk songs, pop ballads, and hymns all cluster around this range. Andante gives musicians enough space to phrase expressively while maintaining a clear rhythmic foundation. For practice at 89 BPM, try matching the click to your footsteps while sight-reading or playing a passage from memory — the physical anchor of walking in time is a powerful way to internalise tempo without over-thinking it.
What does 89 BPM feel like?
At 89 beats per minute, each beat arrives every 674 milliseconds. This corresponds to a relaxed walking pace. The 674 ms gap between beats matches a comfortable stroll — natural and easy for most musicians to internalise.
Songs and music at 89 BPM
Well-known music near this tempo includes 'Piano Man' by Billy Joel (~84 BPM), 'Wonderwall' by Oasis (~87 BPM), and many folk and pop ballads. Use the full MusoKit metronome to practice along with any of these — set it to 89 BPM, hit play, and start counting.
FAQs
What music is at 89 BPM?
The Andante range around 89 BPM covers an enormous range of music: pop ballads, folk songs, hymns, marching band pieces, and countless classic rock songs. 'Piano Man' by Billy Joel and 'Wonderwall' by Oasis both live near this zone.
Is 89 BPM fast or slow?
89 BPM is moderate — close to a natural walking pace. Andante literally means 'going' or 'walking' in Italian.
How accurate is this metronome?
The click uses the Web Audio API's sample-accurate scheduler with a 25 ms lookahead. Drift is under 1 ms per minute.
What is the Italian name for 89 BPM?
Andante — meaning 'walking pace'. This covers roughly 76–108 BPM and is one of the most common tempo markings in classical and popular music.
Can I loop this metronome for a whole practice session?
Yes — the metronome runs indefinitely once started. Hit the play button and it keeps ticking until you stop it. Use the full metronome for a timer feature.