Tempo in a sentence as a noun

I've done it so far on weekends, but I think speeding the tempo will help significantly.

At the same time, they get to control the timing, tempo and content of reporting in the mainstream press.

The cameraman would hum a popular tune at the right tempo and try to turn the crank in time with the beats of the music.

You also have to beat match everything, which means adjusting the tempos of the a capellas so they match your music track.

Easiest way to do this is to find a BPM tapper and tap out the BPM for your song and your a capella, and plug those numbers into your DAW's tempo changer.

Robbed time implies a live performance, and each measure definitely wouldn't be tempo shifted in exactly the same way.

Five years is a really long time in the mobile industry, and will be for the coming decade, even if the crazy tempo is slowing somewhat.

I've been looking for some good sound editing software, and the only solution I could find that was good at altering tempo without creating weird artifacts was closed-source and proprietary.

The first time I tried to conduct a student orchestra, that alone was enough to make the tempo get slower and slower over time, as I kept trying to correct to their beat while they would in turn correct to mine.

For example, a narrated video will likely linger on some images, then cut to something else, and so on, all the while being edited in a particular way, with a particular tempo.

The conductor gets a special synchronized video feed with white dots flashing to indicate tempo, colored lines to show when changes are coming up and bar numbers, all superimposed over the movie.

"The techniques of the police, which are developing at an extremely rapid tempo, have as their necessary end the transformation of the entire nation into a concentration camp.

Tempo definitions

noun

(music) the speed at which a composition is to be played

See also: pacing

noun

the rate of some repeating event

See also: pace