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mp3s

I’ve been spending a lot of time at the gym lately (though this week I’ve got a terrible head cold with congestion, snot, and a nasty sore throat so I’ve been sparing the other gym goers and staying home).

When I’m at the gym I’m still chipping away at Couch to 5k. I’ve completed week 6 but now I keep repeating it because week 7, which calls for 3 days of jogging 2.5 miles or 25 minutes without stopping, intimidates me so much.

One thing that’s helped me immensely through weeks 1 through 6 is listening to the right music. I’ve been using a couple different tools to create my playlists.

How to Determine the right BPM for your walking, jogging, or running pace

The first is Jog.fm (free website). I tell it what pace I jog at (14 minutes miles for me – I can jog but not fast) and it tells me what the right BPM (beats per minute) is. Imagine each time I put a foot down being a beat and matching those movements up to the music. It’s sort of a subconcious way to maintain the right pace. I run on a treadmill at the gym so I have to keep the pace or I’d fall off the back but I’ve set up walking playlists that I’ve used while walking outside and can see from my Runkeeper (free iPhone GPS app that tells you how far you went and how fast) data that I naturally keep the pace my music sets when I use it there.

After I tell jog.fm that my mile time is 14 minutes, it tells me that the right BPM for that pace is about 110 and gives a list of songs at or very close to that number.

But I’ve already got a massive iTunes library and I love to make use of what I already have. So I found a second tool that helps me determine the BPM of the songs I already have.

How to find the BPM of the songs you already have

From the Apple App Store I purchased the app Cadence Desktop Pro for $6.99. I’ve experimented with other software over the years and this is the first one I found that really worked. It analyzes your songs (took overnight for the first go of many thousands of songs in my library) and then export that BPM data back to your iTunes library.

How to create playlists that will have your favorite songs at the right BPM for your pace

In iTunes, I make smart playlists for various paces so my 14 minute mile jogging playlist uses the rule BPM is in the range 108 to 112. I add a few other optional rules like the song should have 4 or 5 stars and not been played within the last week to keep it to the songs I really like but haven’t just heard and then play that playlist while I’m on the treadmill doing my Couch to 5k workout at the gym.

Disclosure: Some links in this post are affiliate links. If you order through my link I’ll get a small commission that’ll help me pay my hosting fees. I’ve purchased this product myself at full price and truly recommend it.

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In iTunes 10, you can now play the media off of any iOS device from any computer. You can’t copy it which I don’t really want to do anyway, but you can play it. When I first read about this new iTunes feature, I glossed over it as not a big deal but last week when I plugged my iPhone into my work computer to upgrade to iOS 4.1 I accidentally realized the awesomeness of it.

playing music from my iphone via itunes

I can plug my iPhone into my work computer and play my own iTunes music rather than hassling with the limited 40 hours per month of Pandora or the inconsistent song volume and propensity to play Christmas music all year of Last.fm. And I can avoid the ads and the need to tell them that I’m still listening every so often.

Playing my own music through iTunes also has added advantages like I can using the play/pause, forward, and back buttons on my keyboard to control my music while I’m working and I can rate and add to the play counts of my own library which influences what music my smart playlists pick up and what gets loaded onto my iPhone.

It’s not quite as awesome as iTunes in the cloud which I was really hoping for in that announcement earlier this month but functionally, it accomplishes what I wanted to get out of iTunes in the cloud. The only caveat being that without the cloud and without wireless syncing, now I have to remember to plug my iPhone into my home computer even more often to keep my playcounts and smart playlists updates and the music on my iPhone rotated since I have more music than will fit on the 32gb iPhone.

I also think that once iOS 4.2 comes out later this year, we might be able to do this without even plugging the phone in via the AirPlay feature and maybe then we’ll be able to sync wirelessly.

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