
miroslav
Cosmic Cowboy
Where do you get this notion from??
BPM is a unit of measure for the rate of tempo. That's all. Nothing to do with average over a song. Well, unless you express it that way, ie, "Oh, the average tempo of that song is 120BPM." Or you can say, the tempo in bar 34 drops to 72 BPM then goes back to 120 BPM in bar 35.
BPM can change throughout a song because the tempo can change.
I know, I know, don't get into an argument with Miro. He's going to make a really long post and automatically win because of TL/DR.![]()
j/k
Look it up....I'm not making it up, and it's got nothing with any "argument".
BPM was always used to express average/overall tempo of a song.
BPM isn't a DAW invention. They were noting BPM as numerical value for a piece of music since back in Mozart's days.

"The tempo of a piece will typically be written at the start of a piece of music, and in modern Western music is usually indicated in beats per minute (BPM)."
One value noted for the song....not a lot of varying values throughout the song.
You guys want to get all DAW-happy and take BMP measurements every few beats or use some 10 decimal point value to describe some *exact* BPM.....knock yourselves out.

Get a metronome....set it to 116 (or watever)....THAT is the BMP.
Now, get the metronome going, and speed up and slow down your playing a bit from measure to measure...not a problem....but the metronome value is still your overall tempo/BMP for the song.