Teaching Tempo as Sensation, Not BPM | iServalan | Continuum Method

Teaching Tempo as Sensation, Not BPM | iServalan | Continuum Method

Teaching Tempo as Sensation, Not BPM
(Why time must be felt before it can be counted)Tempo is usually introduced as a number.60 BPM.
80 BPM.
120 BPM.Neat. Measurable. Reassuring.And completely insufficient.Because tempo is not, first and foremost, a calculation. It is a bodily agreement. A shared sense of how long something takes, how much weight it carries, and how urgently it wants to move forward. Before it is counted, tempo is experienced.The mistake in much modern teaching—and almost all AI-mediated music—is to reverse that order.When learners are taught tempo as BPM first, they learn compliance before understanding. They learn to obey an external clock rather than to inhabit musical time. The metronome becomes a supervisor instead of a reference. Rhythm becomes something to “stay inside” rather than something to shape.The Continuum Approach takes a different stance.Tempo begins as sensation.It lives in walking pace, breathing, pulse, gravity, effort. A slow tempo feels heavy before it feels slow. A fast tempo feels light—or panicked—before it feels fast. Even silence has tempo: the length of a pause carries emotional weight long before it can be timed.This is why children often play with beautiful timing long before they can count it. Patta-cake-patta-cake-baker's-man, and even hopscotch, shows an innate and committed understanding of tempo and what fun it can be. They slow instinctively at the end of a phrase. They rush when excited. They linger when something matters. These are not errors. They are untrained musical intelligence.Counting comes later—not to replace sensation, but to name it. We need it as musicians to organise feelings and enable us to play music with others.In orchestral music, tempo is negotiated constantly. No conductor worth following treats tempo as a fixed speed. It flexes around harmony, texture, and collective breath. In jazz, tempo exists as an elastic centre—felt, implied, argued with. The beat may be steady, but the music leans against it, ahead of it, behind it.This kind of time cannot be taught by grid.It must be taught through:
  • gesture (how the body initiates sound)
  • resistance (how effort changes speed)
  • arrival (how time behaves when something lands)
  • release (how motion dissolves)
Only after these sensations are familiar does BPM become useful. At that point, the number is no longer an authority. It is a translation—a way of communicating shared feeling efficiently, not a rule that dictates it.AI systems cannot do this because sensation is not stored in data. It emerges in relationship: between player and instrument, between players, between sound and space. AI can replicate tempo values flawlessly, but it cannot experience why a tempo needs to change.And this is why platform culture struggles with living time.TikTok, Reels, Shorts—these environments demand rhythmic obedience. Fixed clip lengths punish rubato. Fermatas break loops. Tempo drift disrupts metrics. So music adapts by flattening time until it behaves predictably.What disappears is not complexity, but permission.Permission to hesitate.
Permission to breathe.
Permission to let time thicken or thin in response to meaning.Teaching tempo as sensation restores that permission early—before learners internalise the idea that music must always behave. It tells them: time is not something you are trapped inside. It is something you participate in.The metronome still has a place.
So does counting.
So does precision.But none of them come first.First comes the feeling of moving through sound.
Only then do we decide how fast it was.That ordering—sensation before measurement—is one of the quiet foundations of the Continuum. And without it, we risk raising musicians who can keep perfect time, but have no idea when it should give way.

iServalan™
Music, listening, and the Continuum Approach: Exploring sound across genres, eras, and performance cultures — from Baroque to punk, hip-hop to minimalism — without hierarchy or haste.

🎧 Podcast & essays: 🎻 Music School
https://iservalan.gumroad.com/l/concervatoire?
https://iservalan.gumroad.com📚 Books & long-form work by Sarnia de la Maré FRSA:
https://www.amazon.co.uk/stores/author/B0CWGX2DJ6🎨 Professional profile:
https://www.a-n.co.uk/person/sarnia-de-la-mare-frsa-2/

#iServalan #ContinuumApproach #MusicPodcast #RadicalListening #MusicAcrossGenres
#PerformanceCulture #SarniaDeLaMaré

Episoder(252)

The Pattern Paradox: Why Artists Break What the World Repeats: Continuum Pedagogy

The Pattern Paradox: Why Artists Break What the World Repeats: Continuum Pedagogy

Essays from the Continuum Approach by Sarnia de la MAré FRSAiServalan™Music, listening, and the Continuum Approach: Exploring sound across genres, eras, and performance cultures — from Baroque to punk...

15 Mar 7min

Free Vocal Linguistics Voice as Language Before Words | Continuum Pedagogy

Free Vocal Linguistics Voice as Language Before Words | Continuum Pedagogy

Free Vocal Linguistics: Voice as Language Before Words In much formal musical training, the voice is introduced in a restricted and highly structured way. It is treated primarily as a vehicle for lyri...

8 Mar 7min

 How Scales and Sympathetic Strings Teach the Ear to Play | The Continuum Approach to Music

 How Scales and Sympathetic Strings Teach the Ear to Play | The Continuum Approach to Music

How Scales and Sympathetic Strings Teach the Ear to Play. Before we talk about scales, we should talk about listening. Most people are introduced to scales as ladders — up, down, repeat — something to...

7 Mar 5min

Interlude Lyrics Songs Live Readings in the Public Domain | Continuum Approach

Interlude Lyrics Songs Live Readings in the Public Domain | Continuum Approach

The Continuum Framework™ — A ManifestoThe Continuum Framework™ is a non-linear approach to musical learning that understands sound not as a series of achievements to be climbed, but as a field to be e...

7 Mar 1min

The Continuum Framework™ — A Manifesto by Sarnia de la Maré FRSA #pedagogy

The Continuum Framework™ — A Manifesto by Sarnia de la Maré FRSA #pedagogy

The Continuum Framework™ — A Manifesto. The Continuum Framework™ is a non-linear approach to musical learning that understands sound not as a series of achievements to be climbed, but as a field to be...

7 Mar 1min

The Disappearing Teacher From Self Taught to Self Directed  Continuum Music Studio

The Disappearing Teacher From Self Taught to Self Directed Continuum Music Studio

iServalan™Music, listening, and the Continuum Approach: Exploring sound across genres, eras, and performance cultures — from Baroque to punk, hip-hop to minimalism — without hierarchy or haste.🎧 Podc...

28 Feb 7min

Eye Surgery and the effects on a musician in recovery Continuum Music Studio

Eye Surgery and the effects on a musician in recovery Continuum Music Studio

I have had some time to repair but the struggle is very real.iServalan™Music, listening, and the Continuum Approach: Exploring sound across genres, eras, and performance cultures — from Baroque to pun...

28 Feb 4min

Continuum Music Framework Book Launch on Amazon by Sarnia de la Mare #iServalan™

Continuum Music Framework Book Launch on Amazon by Sarnia de la Mare #iServalan™

iServalan™Music, listening, and the Continuum Approach: Exploring sound across genres, eras, and performance cultures — from Baroque to punk, hip-hop to minimalism — without hierarchy or haste.🎧 Podc...

8 Jan 12min

Populært innen Fakta

mikkels-paskenotter
fastlegen
dine-penger-pengeradet
relasjonspodden-med-dora-thorhallsdottir-kjersti-idem
foreldreradet
rss-strid-de-norske-borgerkrigene
treningspodden
jakt-og-fiskepodden
sinnsyn
rss-kunsten-a-leve
hverdagspsyken
gravid-uke-for-uke
rss-kull
fryktlos
hagespiren-podcast
rss-var-forste-kaffe
rss-bisarr-historie
level-up-med-anniken-binz
hva-er-greia-med
rss-impressions-2