By stochastic, I mean it randomly ticks on only one arbitrary beat per measure

  • Tellore@lemmy.world
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    21 days ago

    Well, something like this is actually quite popular in modular synthesizers community. They have one type of modules called “Clock generators” which generate gate/trigger signals for given BPM (Like 1/4 or 1/8 or 1/16 rhythmic pulses for 120 BPM for example) and another type of modules called “Bernoulli gates”, which basically allow to specify probability of input signal going to the output. Those beat-skipping metronomes with configured probabilities are then used to trigger notes or samples or whatever. Also, this is modular where you can modulate almost everything, including BPM itself, but that’s a different story… Stochastic music approaches like this are often called “alleatoric music”.

  • themusicman@lemmy.world
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    22 days ago

    This is similar to some popular exercises for improving your internal pulse. E.g. having the metronome drop out for a number of bars while you’re playing.

    My prediction:

    On its own, it would be hard to derive the underlying pulse. Even a trained musician would take a little while (my guess is 4+ measures). In the context of a song it would probably have little to no effect.

    I could probably test this if anyone’s interested

  • Dr. Bob@lemmy.ca
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    22 days ago

    I’d just ignore it and play by pulse. You learn to ignore that stuff - out of time clapping, background noises etc.