How to Stop Rushing Easy Songs on Tin Whistle
Rushing usually does not mean the tune is too hard. It usually means the player is moving ahead of the pulse whenever a change feels uncertain.
Check whether this is your problem
- The tune speeds up in repeated phrases
- The rhythm gets tighter right before note changes
- Slowing down one short bar fixes more than replaying the whole tune
Cause 1: You are jumping ahead mentally
When the tune feels familiar, many players stop listening to the current beat and start chasing the next phrase. The result is a song that gradually accelerates.
Hover a control to see what it does.
Reconnect to the beat
Use the repeated pattern to keep the pulse in front of you instead of leaning forward.
Cause 2: The fingers do not trust the next change
Rushing often hides an unstable transition. If a certain change feels uncertain, the body tends to hurry past it.
Hover a control to see what it does.
Slow the fingers back into the pulse
These bars help you keep timing steady while the hands change notes.
Common mistakes
- Restarting the full song every time it speeds up
- Practicing only at the tempo where the rushing starts
- Confusing tension with momentum
Rushing check
Use this short test to check whether the lesson is starting to stick.
Recent Scores
No recent score yet. Your finished challenge runs will appear here.
Press Challenge to start a scored run.
Next step
Once the timing is calmer, the last guide here shows how to stop repeating the same mistake cycle.