Songs with an average tempo, or mean speed, between approximately the range of 106-113 beats per minute almost tend to indicate lust.
The twelve songs are archetypes. Lust does not have to be of the sexual type. In addition, when using a song that is a biological indicator of lust, when words of innocence are transplanted therein, a musical irony occurs.
The second best way to judge this part of the conjecture itself is check out the lists on this page and the thousands of detailed tempo maps of songs found on image searches anywhere online.
Your feedback is especially appreciated as at Meanspeed Music Research Labs in New Jersey, as many of you suggest, it is time to put a set of ideas to work. Problem: The measpeed conjecture is so far different than any tempo theory or music theory in general that has come before, we have no basis for comparing. If, for example, you simply wanted to find out the tempi of the songs seen below, you would not find them anywhere else. The theory on this page is not like anything else. And mocked though I have been from being “anal retentive” and “having way too much time on [my] hands,” both personal insults that substitute for “your calibrations are wrong,” a statement that in 13 years online has never been made.

The conjecture itself is only that – my best guess without a university paying me to take money out of your wallets. The best way to test the conjecture? Try it yourself! The method is completely laid out simple and bare for you on this page. The calibration and chart construction are hard work, they do take an extreme amount of in order to obtain the nuance accuracy, but, as you can do in the same way we do it here, the results are reliable, repeatable and testable – so please let us know how you make out!

Thank you,
Ian Andrew Schneider