Presto in 5/4

Tempo

190 BPM

Presto

Pulse: 5 per measure

Click on a beat to accent it

Volume: 100%

Common questions

What tempo range does the metronome support?

The metronome supports tempos from 50 BPM through 200 BPM, and the preset starts stay inside that same range.

Why is this metronome so precise?

This metronome schedules its clicks against your device's audio clock, so the timing stays tied to the same clock that drives audio playback instead of relying on ordinary timer loops.

How do accented beats work here?

The accent buttons let you choose which beats should stand out in the bar. You can keep only beat 1 accented or build a more specific count like 6/8 or 12/8.

What do tempo names like Andante or Allegro mean?

They are traditional Italian tempo words. They describe both general speed and musical character, so Andante suggests a walking pace while Allegro suggests a quicker, more lively motion. They work best as ranges rather than one fixed number, which is why the BPM slider stays available.

What does a time signature change in practice?

The time signature changes how the bar is grouped and where strong beats usually land. The top number tells you how many beats or beat-groups to count, and the bottom number tells you which note value carries the written beat. In practice, the accent pattern is what makes similar BPM values feel different from one meter to another.

Why do metronomes use both BPM numbers and traditional tempo names?

Tempo words were used in notation long before exact mechanical metronome markings were common. When 19th-century metronomes made beats-per-minute markings easier to share, musicians kept the older names because they still describe character as well as speed. Using both makes it easier to move between musical language and an exact practice number.

What this name and signature suggest

Presto gives you the broad tempo character, while 5/4 tells you how the bar is grouped, so this preset starts with both the pace language and pulse shape already in place.

Why it opens here

Presto spans 180 BPM to 200 BPM here, so the tool starts in the middle while keeping the 5/4 accent pattern ready for immediate counting.

How this bar is usually felt

5/4 is an uneven meter that is often grouped as 3+2 or 2+3, so the accent pattern matters more than the number alone.

Where the terminology comes from

Italian tempo names were established before exact metronome numbers became common, so musicians still use them as a quick way to describe motion and character alongside a precise BPM target.

When this preset helps

Use it when you think in Italian tempo language first but still want the bar grouping locked in before you hit play.

What to do after the first count

If the midpoint is close but not exact, move the BPM slider until the pulse settles naturally inside 5/4.

Practical reference

Tempo ranges and pulse patterns worth keeping nearby

These quick links keep the house Italian tempo ranges and the most common signature patterns easy to compare while you practice.

Italian tempo ranges

Common signatures

Nearby presets

Also called

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