18 Songs at 222 BPM

222 BPM is extreme / sprint tempo. For runners, sprint cadence — short bursts, not sustained.

217 BPM220 BPM224 BPM227 BPM All fast-tempo songs

aggressive (11)

Album art for Right Brigade by Bad Brains
Right Brigade
Bad Brains
intense
Album art for Concubine by Converge
Concubine
Converge
intense
Album art for Whiplash by Metallica
Whiplash
Metallica
intense
Album art for Disposable Heroes by Metallica
Disposable Heroes
Metallica
intense
Album art for Damage, Inc. by Metallica
Damage, Inc.
Metallica
intense
Album art for My Apocalypse by Metallica
My Apocalypse
Metallica
intense
Album art for Reign in Blood by Slayer
Reign in Blood
Slayer
intense
Album art for Angel of Death by Slayer
Angel of Death
Slayer
intense
Album art for War Ensemble by Slayer
War Ensemble
Slayer
intense
Album art for The Antichrist by Slayer
The Antichrist
Slayer
intense
Album art for Hell Awaits by Slayer
Hell Awaits
Slayer
intense

energetic (3)

Album art for Big Takeover by Bad Brains
Big Takeover
Bad Brains
intense
Album art for Cottontail by Duke Ellington
Cottontail
Duke Ellington
moderate
Album art for Real World by Hüsker Dü
Real World
Hüsker Dü
intense

cathartic (2)

Album art for Bee Vamp by Eric Dolphy
Bee Vamp
Eric Dolphy
intense
Album art for Eventually by Ornette Coleman
Eventually
Ornette Coleman
intense

confident (2)

Album art for Pent Up House by Sonny Rollins
Pent Up House
Sonny Rollins
moderate
Album art for Strode Rode by Sonny Rollins
Strode Rode
Sonny Rollins
moderate

What does 222 BPM mean in practice?

BPM (beats per minute) is a song's tempo — literally how many beats occur per minute of music. A steady 4/4 song at 222 BPM has a beat every 270 milliseconds.

  • Runners sync stride to BPM — most recreational runners step at 140-175 steps per minute, so songs near that range match stride naturally.
  • DJs mix adjacent tracks at compatible BPMs (typically within ±6 BPM) for seamless transitions.
  • Workout intensity roughly tracks BPM: 120-140 for steady cardio, 140-170 for HIIT, 170+ for sprints.
  • Music producers match tempo to genre expectations — hip-hop often 85-100, house 120-130, drum-and-bass 160-180.