Les Mills Rpm 56 May 2026
You can find release 56 on the old Les Mills Instructor Portal (under "Archive" -> "RPM" -> "2010"). Note that the production video quality is standard definition (480p), which looks grainy on modern screens, but the audio master is still crisp.
Most RPM warm-ups are about finding your rhythm. Track 1 of Release 56 starts deceptively calm. As the deadmau5 chords swell, the ride instructions are simple: "Find your breath." But the Madeon remix injects a frantic energy. Coaches often note that by the third minute, the resistance is already on. It’s a warm-up that wakes up the legs without shocking the heart, but it warns you: This is not a gentle ride. Music Vibe: Thumping, relentless. les mills rpm 56
Acceleration tracks simulate going over small rises and sprinting down the other side. Track 3 uses the raw, distorted bass of "Kickstarts." Every time the lyric "Stand up" hits, the riders come out of the saddle for a 30-second power climb, followed by a seated sprint. You can find release 56 on the old
The challenge here is control. After heavy climbing, your nervous system is fried. Keeping your upper body still while your legs spin at 120 RPM is a skill. RPM 56’s Speed Work is short—about 4 minutes—but it feels like a fire drill. Music Vibe: Acoustic, folk, melancholic. Track 1 of Release 56 starts deceptively calm
We now enter the "dark room" section. Track 4 is a seated climb. Unlike modern releases that use melodic trance, RPM 56 uses glitchy, industrial progressive house. The resistance goes on early—heavy enough that your quads scream to stand up, but the coaching tells you to stay seated.