114.57 Bpm 【RELIABLE — SECRETS】
| Song | Artist | Actual BPM | |------|--------|-------------| | Get Lucky (verse) | Daft Punk | ~116 | | Feel Good Inc. | Gorillaz | ~114 | | No Diggity | Blackstreet | ~115 | | Bitter Sweet Symphony | The Verve | ~114 |
In these tracks, the tempo represents a compromise: it is dance music for people who are not necessarily "club kids." It is pop music with a pulse. 114.57 bpm
Because 114.57 bpm sits above 100 bpm, it officially enters the zone of a rapid heart rate. | Song | Artist | Actual BPM |
At 120 BPM, an eighth note lasts 250ms. At 114.57 BPM, an eighth note lasts approximately 262ms. This extra 12ms of space is sub-perceptual on a conscious level, but it provides critical "headroom" for the decay of percussive sounds. A snare drum or open hi-hat can "breathe" more effectively at 114.57 BPM. This creates a perceived "fatness" or "thickness" to the groove. It is no coincidence that many "deep house" tracks, known for their warm, heavy low-end, often drift down from the rigid 124-128 standard into this lower territory. At 120 BPM, an eighth note lasts 250ms