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FlowFrame

Beyond the Click : Six Real-World Ways I’m Using FlowFrame Right Now

I built FlowFrame to scratch a very personal itch: a practice tool that could keep up with the way musicians actually work. Since then, the app has grown in directions I never imagined… mostly because my own playing, teaching, and ensemble life keep throwing it new challenges. Below is a quick tour of how FlowFrame shows up in my day-to-day musical world, from five-minute trombone warm-ups to 40-minute New-Music odysseys.

1. Getting in the minutes

Feature in focus: FlowTracker

I use FlowFrame’s FlowTracker features to stay honest with myself. With FlowTracker, I log every practice session—individual and ensemble. I keep notes on what I work on, link practice blocks to click tracks with pitch references, record myself, and tag my practice sessions.

With FlowTracker, I’ve created a streak of 83 days of practice (which is still going!). That visual reminder pushes me to get time in every day, even if it’s just a few minutes. FlowTracker gives you a “Practice Token” every five days that can be used to take a day off without losing your streak.

Within the Review view in FlowTracker, you can look back on your practice sessions, view notes you took and even listen to recordings you may have made.

Also, the Review view has a slew of charts that let’s you see how you’ve spent your practice time including a heat map to see which days you played the most/least quickly, a line chart that gives you a break down of how much time you spent playing on any given day, a “practice time distribution” chart that shows what percentage of your time was spent on which tags, and finally a tempo tracking chart to view how your tempos are progressing on the practice blocks you choose to track.

2. Warm-Ups

Feature in focus: Practice Tools

Warming up is a time for me to focus and ease into playing. I want to meet myself where I am both physically and mentally. I load a steady drone, activate mute random beats and mute random harmony, and let FlowFrame remove reference points unpredictably. Those silent pockets force my ears (and slide) to hold the center without support. When the harmony snaps back in, I know instantly whether my internal pitch engine is firing or sputtering.

It’s like practicing with a teacher who occasionally walks out of the room just to see if you’re still singing in tune.

Playing scales and simple melodies in all keys is also part of my daily routine. I’m particularly

3. Repertoire preparation

ExcerptFeatures in FocusWhy It Helps
Abalorios by Hilda ParedesFull piece click track + tupletsHelps me feel the continuously changing meters and subdivisions
Mahler 2 ChoraleJust-intonation harmonyHelps the brass section feed on each other’s overtones instead of fighting equal temperament

For this year’s Mizzou International Composer Festival, Alarm Will Sound is performing Abalorios by Hilda Paredes, a challenging work with frequently shifting meters and subdivisions that morph from 8 over 2 to 9 over 2. To speed up my practice, I created a click track with all the information I need, meter changes and subdivisions.

FlowFrame pattern from Hilda Paredes’ Abalorios

The Fox Valley Symphony ended our season with Mahler’s Second Symphony. The chorale in the final movement is best practiced with a brass section, but getting folks together for that is a bit challenging. With FlowFrame, I was able to program in the harmony for the section, select “Just Intonation” and practice with all the voices.

The chorale from last movement of Mahler’s Second Symphony

4. The “Slow-to-Fast” Challenge Piece

Feature in focus: Tempo changes

A student was preparing a work for the Soundscapes Festival in Switzerland that accelerates from QN = 60 → 144 over two pages. Traditional metronomes can’t do that and it’s challenging to do on a DAW. FlowFrame’s linear tempo change option lets us chart the entire glide in one line, so they can live inside the acceleration instead of chasing it.

5. Wilson’s Double-Bass Concerto, Mvt III

Feature in focus: Beat groupings

Time-signatures here read like phone numbers: 7/8, 9/8, 5/8 with sub-groupings 3+2+2 then 2+3+2… you get the picture. We programmed each bar (copy-paste is your friend) and let the grouping accents light up the sideways pulse. What used to be a bar-line guessing game is now muscle memory.

6. Birding with John Luther Adams

Feature in focus: FreeFlow

John Luther Adams’ Ten Thousand Birds is not a traditional through-composed piece. Players are provided a folio of bird songs which can be played in any order. Alan Pierson, Alarm Will Sound Artistic Director, has structured these songs into an hour-long cycle representative of a day. To keep players on track, we used FlowFrame’s FreeFlow feature.

The FreeFlow time map for John Luther Adams’ Ten Thousand Birds.

With FreeFlow, users can personalize their Time Markers however they like (e.g. with what song they need to play at a particular time or when they exit). They’ll then receive a countdown to their marker (and a vibration on their phone if they click the bell icon).

Your Turn

If any of these use-cases ring a bell, fire up flowframe.app and recreate them or invent your own. And if you discover a wild corner case that FlowFrame doesn’t handle yet, drop me a note. That’s how the next feature gets born.

Happy tracking, clicking, droning, ramping, and, most of all, music-making.

Categories
Feature FlowFrame Practice

There’s No One Right Way to Make Music

If there’s a single belief that’s guided the development of FlowFrame, it’s this:
There is no one right way to make music.

Not in how you compose it.
Not in how you teach it.
Not in how you practice it.

Music is shaped by bodies, communities, values, traditions, physics and always by personal taste. The goal of FlowFrame isn’t to enforce a method. It’s to provide a structure that helps you pursue your own.

That means building a tool that adapts to what you need, whether you’re grounding yourself in the overtone series, navigating tempo curves, or improvising with harmonies that fall outside Western tuning.

Here are some of the ways FlowFrame supports that idea.

Flexible Time and Pulse

  • Metric Modulations: A quarter note from a quarter note triplet can become the eighth note of the next measure, no math required.
  • Tuplets and Nested Tuplets: Build rhythmic structures as intricate (or simple) as the music demands.
  • Subdivisions up to 12: Layer up to five different subdivisions on a single beat to mirror complex rhythmic feels.
  • Beat Groupings: Customize how measures are grouped and accented—useful for everything from Bulgarian dance music to expressive rubato.

Pitch, Drone, and Harmony—Your Way

  • Drones: Pitch-stable practice with variable A tuning (adjustable in cents).
  • Preset Harmonies: Select from built-in chord types or stack your own.
  • “Any Note” Drones: Choose from four octaves to create exactly the harmonic environment you want.
  • Just Intonation (and other temperaments) + Reference Pitch: Tune every note relative to any pitch center you define.
  • Overtone Series-Tuned Drones: Build practice tools aligned to the physics of sound.
  • Quarter-Tone Support: Explore microtonality and expressive intonation without needing external synths or plugins.

Time-Event Music? There’s a Frame for That Too.

Some music isn’t measured in beats at all—it’s structured by seconds, not measures. For that, there’s FreeFlow, FlowFrame’s time-event framework.

Use it to:

  • Rehearse or perform works coordinated by stopwatch instead of barlines
  • Trigger cues with clock precision
  • Synchronize players in pieces where pulse is irrelevant or intentionally absent

So What Is FlowFrame, Really?

It’s not just a metronome.
It’s not just a tuner.
It’s not just a tracker.

It’s a practice framework, designed to grow with you, not to tell you how to play.

Whether you’re a classical flutist fine-tuning your vibrato to a just-tuned drone, an experimental violinist redefining pulse, or a teacher building patterns for your students, the point is this:

You don’t need to change your music to fit the tool.
The tool should meet you where you are and open new possibilities from there.

Categories
Feature FlowFrame Music Practice

Built With You: How FlowFrame Grows Through Your Ideas

One of the best parts of building FlowFrame has been seeing it evolve not just from my ideas, but from user-suggested features.

Some of my favorite features weren’t in the original plan. They came from musicians I admire, collaborators I trust, and friends who use FlowFrame in ways I couldn’t have predicted.

The Bulk Editor

This one came from my wife, Erin Lesser, an extraordinary flutist, teacher, and someone with an uncanny ability to spot inefficiencies. Watching her prep a pattern one day, she said:

“I wish I could change all these measures at once.”

She was right.

The bulk editor, a user-suggested feature added to FlowFrame.

So we built the Bulk Editor, a way to create multiple measures with meter, easily. It saves time and reduces friction, which means more focus on the music itself.

This one came from Alan Pierson, a dear friend and artistic compatriot at Alarm Will Sound. He asked a simple question:

“Could I just share a pattern with someone by sending them a link?”

The answer, at the time, was no. But it should’ve been yes.
Now it is.

Link sharing, another user-suggested feature added to FlowFrame.

You can share any FlowFrame with a link. No downloads, no zip files, no need to walk someone through your tempo map over text. Just click, copy, send. It’s a small shift that opens the door to faster collaboration and deeper creative exchange, something Alan has always championed in his own work.

Remove Beat 1 Emphasis

During beta testing, I had the chance to hear Ben Russell play with FlowFrame. He was exploring rhythm: layering subdivisions, shifting feels, creating something intricate and propulsive.

But I noticed something: the emphasized downbeat (useful for many) was getting in the way of the rhythmic patterns he was trying to bring out.

That moment led to the “Remove Beat 1 Emphasis” feature. Now, you can turn off the default downbeat click and build patterns where every beat carries equal weight or where the emphasis comes entirely from the player, not the tool.

De-emphasizing beat one, a user-suggested feature added to FlowFrame.

What’s Next

These features didn’t come from a roadmap, they came from real musicians solving real problems. User-suggested features are how FlowFrame will continue to grow.

I’m currently working on a feature to allow creating and sharing recordings. And I just had a conversation with my dear friend Mark Dupere regarding adding temperaments to the tuning options. This summer, I’m working on multi-language support, so that FlowFrame can be more accessible to musicians around the world. And beyond that, I’ll keep listening to your feedback, your frustrations, and your ideas.

If you’ve got one, send it my way at flowframe [at] flowframe [dot] app. Some of the best parts of this tool weren’t mine to begin with.