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==Techniques== {{Listen |filename=50BPMclicktrack.ogg |title=Subdivided 50 bpm click track |description=Example of a subdivided {{music|time|4|4}}, 50 bpm click track |format=[[Ogg]]}} The click track may be used as a form of metronome directly by musicians in the studio or on stage, particularly by drummers, who listen via [[headphones]] to maintain a consistent beat. Sometimes the click track would be given, through a set of headphones, only to the drummer who would hold the beat, and the rest of the musicians on staff would follow along to the beat that the drummer would hold.<ref name="GHarrison"/> One can think of a click track as essentially being a kind of metronome except that it is fed through headphones to one or more of the musicians during a recording or performance. It is also not uncommon for musicians or engineers to subdivide click tracks at slow tempos<ref name="GHarrison"/> (for instance, below 70 BPM) into smaller parts, with, for instance a click on the start of a bar and a beep on every individual quarter (or eighth, sixteenth...) note. In the final product of the film or performance that is being recorded, the click track is not heard by the audience. The practice of recording using an aiding click track is contrary to the practice of using a metronome during practice and then turning it off come time for a performance or recording, which has traditionally been more common in the past. The use of a click track allows for easier editing in a [[digital audio workstation]] (DAW) or [[music sequencer]], since various parts can be easily quantized and moved around or spliced together without worrying about minute differences in timing. Click tracks are especially useful to modern "[[one man band]]s" who may use a multi-track audio editor to perform all or many of the different parts of a recording separately. Click tracks can also aid live bands that want to synchronize a live performance with things like prerecorded [[backing tracks]], [[pyrotechnics]] and [[stage lighting]].<ref name="GHarrison"/>
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