Breaking News

Main Menu

Pg Music Band In A Box 2018 Pro Software For Mac

среда 08 апреля admin 87

No Sound / MIDI and Audio SetupBand-in-a-Box ® uses a mixture of both audio and MIDI. Audio refers to RealTracks and RealDrums, which don't require a MIDI synth to play - you will hear the 'Real' instrument tracks even if you don't have a MIDI driver properly set up (provided your speaker volume is turned up). Band-in-a-Box ® songs may have only MIDI, some MIDI and some RealTracks/Drums, or ALL RealTracks/Drums. To identify if your song is using MIDI or RealTracks, look at the track names in the instrument panel at the top of the main Band-in-a-Box ® screen - Bass, Piano, Drums, Strings, Melody, Soloist. If a track name is black it is a MIDI track, if it is green it is a RealTracks or RealDrums track.

Band-in-a-Box is a music accompaniment software package for Windows and macOS produced by PG Music Incorporated in Victoria, British Columbia.The software allows the user to create songs by simple keyboard inputs: a musical style, a tempo and a key. The screen resembles a blank page of music. Band-in-a-Box version 12 is fully Mac OS X carbonized. It has a huge number of improved Styles, Soloist, Harmonies, and Song Demos, making your Band-in-a-Box software sound better than ever! Program operations are much faster, including up to 3 times faster notation redraws, song, and soloing generation.

If it is red then the track is currently muted. You can mute/un-mute/solo any track by control-clicking on it and choosing the appropriate menu item.The easiest way to set up MIDI, is to use the Mac's built-in sounds (Apple DLS Synth).

This requires very little setup, and should work automatically. If not, check Options MIDI input/output ports and select 'MIDI Plugins' for each port. Also, check your computer's main sound settings in System Preferences Sound Output. What is MIDI?MIDI is an acronym for Musical Instrument Digital Interface. The MIDI specification is maintained by the. We have written a couple of short starter tutorials on MIDI:.There are many other MIDI tutorials on the internet, which you can find using any internet search engine.3.

How do I enter notation in Band-in-a-Box ®?Band-in-a-Box ® offers one of the quickest methods of notation input. Remember though, it was never developed to be a dedicated notation software package, so some of the problems you may run into will have to do with that limitation. For typical leadsheets though, this notation is more than adequate.First, you need to be in editable notation mode. Open the Notation Window, and press the N button once to toggle from regular notation mode to editable notation mode.When inputting notation, all you do is place your mouse arrow where you want a note and press mouse button. This will place a dotted whole note at that position.

If it is in the second half of the bar, you will get an automatic 1/2 note rest in the first half. You will still get a dotted whole note in the second half of the bar.

Don't worry if the first note you enter isn't the type of note you want it to be. The next note you place will determine the value of the first. Remember that the subsequent note placed always determines the value of the previous note. If you want to shorten a previous note, you can select the rest box and place a rest between the notes at the value you want the previous note to be. Notes inserted between other notes will automatically set the value for the previous note as well.While inserting a note on the staff, holding down the Shift key will make the note 1 half-step sharper.

Holding down the Ctrl key will make the note 1 half-step flatter. Holding down the Command key forces the note to be a natural. To delete a note from the Notation, hold down the delete key and click on the note.You can change the beat resolution (the number of intervals in one beat) using the 'Resolution' setting in the Notation Window. For example, if you set this to '3', you will be able to enter triplets. If you set it to '4', you will be able to enter sixteenths. How do I create a shortcut (alias) on my desktop to open Band-in-a-Box ®?Open the Band-in-a-Box ® folder on your hard drive. This is normally /Applications/Band-in-a-Box ®.

Click on the file named 'Band-in-a-Box ®' to highlight it - this is the Band-in-a-Box ® application. Go to the File menu and select Make Alias, or press Command-L.

The alias should appear in the Band-in-a-Box ® folder, and you can drag it to the desktop.Alternatively, you could add Band-in-a-Box ® to your dock. To do this, you can either drag the Band-in-a-Box ® application there (making sure to drag it to the left of the line that separates the trash with the rest of the items), or you can control-click on the icon in the dock while the application is running, and select 'Keep in dock'.

How do I add my personal styles to the Band-in-a-Box ® StylePicker list?Band-in-a-Box ® styles need to be placed in the 'Styles' folder, within the '/Applications/Band-in-a-Box' on your hard drive, so the program can find them. This does not automatically add them to the list of styles in the StylePicker window, however you can still access them by using the User Load Style from Disk menu item, or Command-U. If you get a 'style not found' message when trying to play a song, this typically means that the style is not in the Styles folder.You can add your Style to the StylePicker list by pressing the Rebuild button and selecting Slow Rebuild, which looks for third party and user styles.

Your style should now appear in the list and will show up as a 'User' style (Set# column). If you want to, you can show ONLY user styles by selecting the option under the 'Other' drop-down menu - 'User Styles Only'. How can I make my song endings more natural? Can I hold the last chord in the song and have it fade out?You have the option of using the automatic 2 bar ending in any Band-in-a-Box ® song, or disabling the automatic ending and holding the last chord of your song.

Band-in-a-Box ® 2010 or higher also have the option of using an automatic 4 bar ending for the RealTracks, which gives the instruments a longer time to decay.If automatic endings don't seem to be working for the RealTracks in your song at all, try entering a simpler chord in the ending bar. For example, instead of typing Cmaj13, type in Cmaj7. To be sure to get an ending, use Maj, min, Maj7, or m7 chords. There aren't specific endings for dominant 7 chords. For Jazz styles, use Maj7 or m7.

For Pop/Rock/Country styles, use maj or m.If you have selected to use the 4-bar ending and it doesn't seem to be working:. Make sure the 4-bar ending setting is enabled in the Song Settings dialog (S button), or globally in the RealTracks Settings dialog. Try entering a simpler chord in your ending bar, as mentioned above. The RealTracks you have installed might not support 4-bar endings.

Check for an updated version of the RealTracks on our. MIDI tracks don't need long to decay, so they don't have 4-bar endings.

Also, there are some RealTracks instruments that don't need 4-bar endings because they naturally end abruptly. 4-bar endings benefit instruments that need a long time to decay.If you don't want to use the automatic ending at all, and instead want to hold the last chord in your song, just enter the last chord followed by three periods (for example Cmaj.). Then, don't enter any chord after that, but extend the length of your song (end of chorus) to give enough time for the instruments to decay. A few notes about this.

This will work only if you have the automatic ending disabled. Your song needs to either have just one chorus, or multiple choruses with a tag ending. (If you have multiple choruses without a tag ending, you can't hold the last bar of the song because the hold will be played each chorus).

RealTracks will hold as long as you have Band-in-a-Box ® 2010 (or higher), and have the holds files installed (RealTracksLibraryMHolds.). There are a few RealTracks instruments that don't have holds, such as some soloists.

You can find out if an instrument supports holds by looking under the 'Holds' column in the RealTracks window.Another option: Use the 'Fade-out ending # bars'. This is found in the Song Settings dialog. How do I display 'Swing' notation (triplets) and 'Even feel' notation (sixteenths) in the same song? How do I enter quarter note triplets?You can switch between Swing and Even feel notation entry by setting the 'Resolution' to either 3 or 4 in the Notation Window Options dialog. For eighth note triplets, enter a note on three consecutive dotted lines. For quarter note triplets, enter a note on every second dotted line. Ill rose mendoza story.

Note that while your music will always.play. the way you input it, you may not always be able to get triplets to.display. exactly how you want. How do I use tag endings?In Band-in-a-Box ®, a tag is a group of bars played after the final chorus of a song. You can find tag settings under Edit Additional Song Settings. Set the 'Tag exists' field to Yes and then choose the tag starting and ending bars. If you have 'Generate 2 bar ending' selected, this will play automatically after the tag.

Note that the tag will only work if there is more than one chorus. Can I import and play MIDI files with Band-in-a-Box ®?There are a couple of different things you can do.You can use File Import Chords from MIDI. Band-in-a-Box ® will interpret the chords from your MIDI file and write these in the Chord Sheet window, and will also import one or more instruments (usually the Melody and Solo) to the Melody and/or Soloist tracks. Once you do this, you have the chord symbols and Melody, and you can select a style that you want to use to create an accompaniment.With any version of Band-in-a-Box ®, you can import any part of a MIDI file into the Melody track by using MEL Import Melody from MIDI file.

Usually this feature is used to import only the melody from a MIDI file. If you import more than one instrument to the Melody track this way, you will want to switch the Melody track to a multi-channel track by going to the MEL menu and selecting the 'Track type'. Here are the basic steps:. Choose Melody Import Melody from MIDI file.

If you wanted to import to the Soloist track, you would use Soloist Edit Soloist Track Import Soloist Part from MIDI File. Select the MIDI file from the open dialog. If you just want the Melody be sure to select only the channel the Melody is on for importing. Otherwise select all MIDI channels. Click OK. A dialog will appear informing you that the file has been imported.

If you imported more than just the melody, you probably will want to set the Melody track to multi-channel, otherwise everything will play using only one instrument. Click MEL Track Type and set it to Multi-Channel. MUTE all Band-in-a-Box ® tracks except for the Melody by clickin on the M button, followed by the track. You can now play your MIDI file.10. How do I change from 3/4 to 4/4 time in the middle of my song?In order to do this, you should start out with a 4/4 style. Using the F5 key (Edit settings for current bar), you can switch between 3/4 and 4/4 at any point in your song.

There are other ways to do this, but starting with a 4/4 style instead of a 3/4 style is easier, as dropping a beat is easier than creating one that doesn't exist. How do I create and use Band-in-a-Box ® Styles in 6/8,12/8,9/8 and 5/4 time signatures?Band-in-a-Box ®'s StyleMaker creates styles in 3/4 or 4/4 only. However, consider that 6/8, 9/8, & 12/8 styles are justvariations of 3/4 or 4/4 - you can make and use styles in these time signatures to get the same effect. 12/8: Band-in-a-Box ® considers 12/8 to be a variation of a 4/4 style (i.e. A 4/4 style with a triplet feel).

To make a 12/8 style, just make a 4/4 style in a triplet feel. In other words, one bar of 12/8 is equivalent to one bar of 4/4 in a triplet feel. For an example, choose the 'Country 12/8' style from the Styles menu. 6/8: This is similar to 12/8. Two bars of 6/8 make up one bar of 12/8, so 6/8 is done in 4/4 as well.

Think of 6/8 as 2 beats of 4/4 in a triplet feel. For an example of this, go to the Styles menu, and select the 'Irish' style. You can set the number of beats per bar to 2 in the Edit Settings for Current Bar dialog (F5).

9/8: This is like a waltz (3/4) style in a triplet feel. 5/4, 6/4, 7/4 etc.: Songs in time signatures like 5/4 and 7/4 can be made. Just pick a base time signature of 3/4 or 4/4, then highlight the bars in your song and select the time signature of 5/4 or 7/4 using the Edit Set Time Sig of Scrap menu item.

Note that for time signatures higher than 4/4, each bar of 5/4 etc. Will be spread over two or more bars in Band-in-a-Box ®.

For example, 5/4 alternates between a bar of 3 and a bar of 2.You can use the Search function in the StylePicker to find styles written for a specific compound time signature.Note: Styles Set 38 for Band-in-a-Box ® ('About Time') has many excellent styles with unusual time signatures such as 5/4, 7/8, 11/8, 14/8, and 19/16. These styles have been written so that, for example, a bar of 5/4 occupies exactly one bar in Band-in-a-Box ®, rather than being spread out over two bars. Who owns the songs that I create with Band-in-a-Box ®? Are the songs copyrighted?The arrangements made by Band-in-a-Box ® are yours, and your songs may be used freely as long as they don't infringe upon the intellectual property rights of others. How do I rest more than one bar at a time?From the Chord entry grid:. Click on the bar you want to rest and press Option+Z.

Place the chord, select rest type, and the instruments needed to be rested. Click OK. Highlight all the bars to be rested.

Go to Edit Copy rests. How can I easily raise or lower the velocity (volume) of all notes in the melody track?Choose Melody Edit Melody Track Adjust level of Melody, and choose how much you want to increase ALL note velocities on the melody track.

You can choose 127, and all notes will be set to maximum velocity (127). For example three notes with velocities 30, 67, and 110 would all be set to 127(maximum). If you choose 10, 10 will be added to all velocities. For example, three notes with velocities 30, 67, and 110 would be set to 40, 77, and 120 respectively. Can I enter a melody into Band-in-a-Box ® using the computer keyboard?Here is a method that you can use to record a melody into Band-in-a-Box ® using the computer keyboard:. Go to the Song menu and make sure 'Wizard Playalong Feature' is enabled.

Start recording. Choose any key on your computer keyboard (N for example) and strike it in time with the notes of your melody. The idea here is not to get the note pitches right, just the durations. When you have finished, keep the take. Next, put the Notation Window into editable notation mode. Go through the melody and drag the notes up or down using the mouse, to get the pitches right.16. I am having trouble recording into Band-in-a-Box ® with my Wind Controller.When using a wind controller with a computer program, make sure to filter out most of the MIDI information that is sent from the controller.

Malayalam books free reading. The default settings have an 'avalanche' of MIDI information, which can take up much of the CPU time reading it, or overwhelm the MIDI buffer. Other than that, you should be able to use it as a normal controller. There are Record Filter settings in Band-in-a-Box ® that can allow you to choose to ignore much of the MIDI information that gets sent ( Options MIDI. Filter for Recording). How do I get chords to sound on the off-beat, or create syncopation in my music?This can be done by pushing the chords when you enter them into the Band-in-a-Box ® chordsheet. To push chords, enter one caret (^) to play the chord an eighth note early and two carets (^^) to play it sixteenth note early.You are allowed to enter 4 chords per bar in Band-in-a-Box ®, that is, one on every beat in 4/4 time. If you were 'counting' the timing for the downbeats only, it would of course be 1 - 2 - 3 - 4.

If you were counting the timing for the upbeats AND downbeats, it would be 1 & 2 & 3 & 4 & (the '&' being the upbeat). You can enter a '^' (caret) sign before any of the chords in the 4 positions of the bar, and have that chord 'pushed', or played on the '&' count (that is, the upbeat). However, if you change the chord on the upbeat, it will play for a duration of a dotted quarter note. You cannot change it to something else on the NEXT downbeat. In other words it won't play an eighth note by itself.Try this example: Open a new song and set the style to Country 4/4 (it's under the S menu). For the first bar of the song enter these 4 chords: C,C and C,^F (all 4 chords in the first bar, remember the caret before the F chord). In the second bar, enter F,F and F,F.

Now use Ctrl-W to get to the notation display and press Play. Click on the B at the bottom right of the menu bar to display the Bass notes.

You will see that there are 3 C notes, being 2 quarter notes, one eighth note and then a dotted quarter F note. The second bar has 4 quarter notes of F - the chord changes from C to F after counting 1 & 2 & 3 (that is, it changes on the & or the upbeat after the 3). Because you have used up the 4th beat in the first bar with your ^F designation, you cannot change the chord to anything else on beat 4 18. Please explain the song structure in Band-in-a-Box ®.Band-in-a-Box uses the Jazz convention that a 'Chorus' is the whole song.

This topic covers the terminology of:. Intro. Verse. Chorus.

Bridge. TagYou'll need to use the 'Framing Controls' of Band-in-a-Box ®, where you set the chorus begin bar, the chorus end bar, and the number of choruses to repeat.INTROHow long an intro is, and what is included, is determined by what is in the 1st number box of the framing section of Band-in-a-Box ®. So if your first chorus starts at bar #17, you have from bar #1 to #16 (16 bars) to do what ever you want to with. You could create a standard intro, or with instruments coming on one at a time every 4 bars. You may place part markers, to go from lighter to heavier feels. You may include as many bars as you need to, but this section will only play once.VERSE/CHORUS Section'Chorus begins at bar #17' means that everything from bar 17 to the 'Chorus ends at' bar (lets choose 48) will play or repeat as many times as you have indicated in '#choruses'. In this section it is a good idea to make full use of the part markers, which will give your song a different feel, especially in the bridge.BRIDGEContained within the main framing section of the song, the bridge is usually emphasized with the use of the 'B' substyle.

To make your song even more interesting, Band-in-a-Box ® allows you to do style changes at any bar. Experiment with two styles that are similar, and later with wildly different styles.THE TAGThe tag can also be used similarly to the intro. You can make it as long as you like. It will fall outside of the 'chorus begins at' and 'chorus ends at' section, so it will only play once.

It could consist of the chords for a bridge, a key change and chorus restatement, then a full ending. Note: A Tag will only be active if there is more than one chorus set to play.THE 2 BAR ENDINGThis automatic feature can be selected if you do not want to create your own ending with held bars/instruments and/or rests. It will add 2 bars, or start 2 bars early to end on the last designated bar if you choose. How do I access higher bank patches in Band-in-a-Box ®? What are MSB and LSB?There are 3 things that control which sound is played:.

Patch or Program Change. Bank MSB, or controller 0. Bank LSB, or Controller 32.Each of these can have a value from 0 to 127.

When you are only interested in using the General MIDI instruments on your synth, you only need to worry about the Patch or Program Change. MSB and LSB can be left at 0. However, most synths have patches on higher banks beyond the General MIDI set of instruments, and if you want to access these sounds, you will need to use Bank changes.At one time, no synthesizer had more than 128 sounds. As technology progressed, musicians demanded more sounds. The MIDI Association then developed a new MIDI command called the Bank Select Command. There are two controller messages in the Bank Select command:. Continuous Controller 0 (Most Significant Bit or MSB) messages are often abbreviated as CC in manuals (For example: CC0).

Continuous Controller 32 (Least Significant Bit or LSB) messages are often abbreviated as CC32 in manuals.Two separate messages allows you to access up to 16,384 banks, of 128 patches each. This creates locations for 2,097,152 patches. Needless to say, we're not aware of any modules with over a couple of thousand patches (yet), let alone two million.Some modules/synths require both controller 0 and controller 32 together and some require them one at a time. Refer to your manual for accessing patches on higher banks on your particular synth.In your synth or module's manual, bank is usually listed first. In Roland manuals, it is in the CC00 (BANK) column. Place this value into the Bank Box.

The second column in the table is usually the Program Change column. Also known as the GM or GS patch name, choose this patch number from the instrument pull-down menu. Don't worry if the General MIDI instrument name does not match the name of the patch you are trying to access. Just go by the number if it's not a General MIDI instrument you are trying to access. Controller Number 32 or LSB may be needed as well.

Although it is not used very much in the Roland line of synths, it is used extensively in some other synths.Once you have selected the patch (Instrument menu), Bank (MSB) and Bank (LSB), you should hear the higher bank instrument that you are trying to access.If you are selecting patches from higher banks very much, you may want to see the next FAQ topic. Patch maps allow you to choose any patch on your synth by name, using the 'Select Patch from Higher Bank' dialog (click the + button next to the instrument pull-down menu).Note that if you change the default patches used by the style, you will probably need to use File Save song with patches and harmony to prevent your chosen patches from reverting back to the style defaults when you press Play. How do I make a patch map for my synthesizer?We include some patch maps (.pat files) with Band-in-a-Box ®. Other patch maps are available for download from our website at:If you cannot find a patch map for your synth, you may wish to create one. We have written a.For more information on how to select patches on higher banks, see the previous FAQ topic. How can I save my Band-in-a-Box ® songs as MIDI or Audio files, and import them into other applications or burn an Audio CD?You can save your Band-in-a-Box ® song in a number of different formats for use with other programs, emailing to a friend, uploading to the web, burning a CD, etc.Saving as a MIDI file.You can create a standard MIDI file from your song, which can be imported into a sequencer or any other program that can read standard type 1 MIDI files. Click the.MID button on the main screen of Band-in-a-Box ®.

This will give you the option to either save the file on disk, or to the clipboard. If you choose 'file on disk', this will bring up the'File Save' dialog. Choose the location you want the MIDI file saved to and then hit the save button.Saving as an Audio file.You can render your song as AIFF (uncompressed audio - lossless), M4A (compressed audio - lossy but much smaller than AIFF), or WAV (uncompressed audio - lossless, Windows format). In addition, you can render a full mix of your song, just RealTracks, just MIDI tracks, or individual tracks.

To do this, simply click the Audio button on the main toolbar in Band-in-a-Box ®, select the options you want, and press the Render button. Another method of rendering individual tracks to audio, is to control-click on the track in the instrument panel at the top of the screen, and select 'Save track as AIFF'.Another way to render audio files is by drag n' drop. There are two simple steps - First, simply drag the track of interest onto the appropriate quadrant of the Drop Station - this is at the top-left of the Band-in-a-Box toolbar. When the file is available ('prepared'), the quadrant will turn green, and this indicates that you can proceed to Step 2, which is to drag from that quadrant to any location in Finder or in another program that accepts such files.By default, the rendered audio files are saved within the /Applications/Band-in-a-Box ®/Song Renders/ folder.

A subfolder will be created in th Song Renders folder, called MySongNameRenderFolder. This subfolder contains all of the audio files associated with your song. There may only be one file, such as if you render a full mix, or there may be multiple files, such as if you render one audio file per track.If you will be working in GarageBand, there is some additional information in our.If you want to create an audio CD, you can use a few different applications. One example is iTunes. To burn a CD with iTunes, create a new Playlist, drag your songs onto it, then click the Burn Disc button at the bottom of the window. Note that because specific iTunes features tend to change when new versions are released, these are only intended as general instructions.Which Output format should I use?You may be wondering whether you should save as AIFF, M4A, or WAV.

When your plan is to work on an audio file in another program (for example GarageBand), or if you your intent is to burn the file to make an audio CD, it is normally best to save as uncompressed AIFF. This file type is much larger than M4A, being an uncompressed audio format. You will probably not be able to hear the difference between M4A and AIFF, but there.is. some degredation in sound quality. In addition, the file would need to be uncompressed to AIFF in order to be edited in another program, and if you keep uncompressing and compressing the file you will be degrading the sound quality each time, since going from M4A to AIFF does not increase the sound quality.Save as M4A when you know the resulting audio file will be the finished product - the small filesize will make it convenient for many things, for example saving on an iPod, uploading to the web, or emailing as an attachment.WAV is another type of uncompressed audio format.

It's similar to AIFF but is the format most commonly used on Windows computers. If the file will be used on a Windows computer, it is probably best to save it as a.WAV file.You can choose between a Stereo or Mono audio file, or 'auto channels' (usually the best). The significance of the 'Auto channels' setting is that some RealTracks instruments are originally mono (for example Sax soloists), and some are originally stereo (for example, Acoustic guitar strumming). This setting preserves the stereo/mono nature of the original RealTracks/Drums recordings. Can Band-in-a-Box ® input chords for my melody?Sure, there is a feature that will create chord progressions that are based only on your Melody and a genre of your choice. This feature is called the Reharmonist, and can be accessed by pressing the 'Re-Harm' button in the toolbar or by going to Windows Chord Reharmonist Dialog or Windows Auto-generate Chord Reharmonization. The former allows you to choose your own chords for each 4-bar section, while the latter menu option will auto-generate chords for the entire song based on a genre you select.

Why don't my Styles appear in the StylePicker window?The latest Styles database (Factorystylz1.bin) is included in the /Band-in-a-Box ®/Data folder, and defines most of the information in the StylePicker window. This file is updated when we release new Styles so that the StylePicker window will recognize them. Band-in-a-Box ® styles (.STY files) should all be located within the /Band-in-a-Box ®/Styles folder. There are a few different explanations for why the styles wouldn't show up:. You may be filtering the StylePicker list by category, search string, feel, etc.

Click the Clear button to clear all Filters. The StylePicker list may need to be rebuilt. Press the Re-Build button and choose Fast Rebuild. Download and install the latest update patch for your version, available from. This includes the latest Styles database available for your version.

Are you looking for custom styles that you have made, or that were made by a third party? Make sure your styles are in the /Applications/Band-in-a-Box/Styles folder, and press the Rebuild button - select Slow Rebuild to find third party styles. They will show up as User styles. Are you wondering why there are lots of N/A styles?

You may have the basic 'Pro' version of the program, which only includes a basic set of styles. You can get many more styles by upgrading to one of the MegaPAK (or higher) packages.

The StylePicker has options to hide N/A styles, under the 'Other' drop-down menu. Are you looking for RealStyles / Styles with RealTracks? These are installed with the RealTracks installers, not with the Band-in-a-Box ® program installer. Perhaps you haven't installed them yet.24. How do I enter more than 2 chords per bar in Band-in-a-Box ®?You can enter a maximum of four chords per bar - two chords per 'cell'(first or second half of a bar). To enter two chords in the first or second half of a bar, simply separate the chords by a comma when you type them in.

For example, type: Cmaj, Gm enter. Location of backup files.This may be useful if you need access something that is only available with the 32-bit version, for example to use a 32-bit audio plugin without installing jBridge.Incidentally, the Backup folder also contains previous builds of Band-in-a-Box.app if you have installed any patches (2019 and higher). They are compressed as.zip files to save space.

Unzip and copy to the main Band-in-a-Box folder if you want to run one. I've installed Band-in-a-Box, but when I try to run it I get error messages and the program doesn't open properly.

The errors may refer to folders not being present or writable and/or refer to several missing files.There are two main reasons this could happen.- You are running Band-in-a-Box.app outside it's folder. Band-in-a-Box.app needs to stay inside the Band-in-a-Box folder (/Applications/Band-in-a-Box/).

You can make an alias of it if you want to have a shortcut on your desktop.or- The hard drive you have Band-in-a-Box on was formatted with a case sensitive file system. This is not very common. You can check this by selecting the hard drive on your desktop or in Finder, and going to the File menu Get Info (Command+I is the keyboard shortcut). Apple's Disk Utility gives you the option to format with case sensitivity. What this means is that file.txt, File.txt, and FILE.

Perfect for musicians, songwriters, and educators – award-winning Band-in-a-Box is the world’s premiere auto accompaniment and style-based music creation software. Use it to easily create backing tracks for songs, jam tracks for practicing solos and improvisation, or as a powerful songwriting tool. Just type in some chords (like C, Fm7, or C13b9), choose a style, and Band-in-a-Box automatically creates professional-quality backing tracks with keyboards, bass, drums, guitar, strings, horns, and other instruments. Band-in-a-Box supports a wide variety of popular styles including Rock, Pop, Country, Folk, Celtic, Blues, Jazz, Latin, and Bluegrass styles. You can also create jam tracks using your own Hybrid Styles.Get great-sounding backing tracks with RealDrums and RealTracks, which give you over 200 hours of studio musicians` recordings to use in your songs! RealTracks are available in a wide range of musical styles, keys, and tempos and use the high-quality Elastique 3 audio stretching and transposition engine. RealStyle automatically selects RealTracks for you when generating an arrangement.

RealCharts even lets you view the music notation and guitar tab/fretboard display.For added versatility, you can import your own or 3rd party loops or your favorite MIDITrack in any style to any track in your arrangement. Use the built-in mixer to control volume, panning, tone, and reverb for each instrument in your ultra-realistic Band-in-a-Box arrangement. The “Combo” slider lets you make changes to all tracks at once.Print your song arrangements as sheet music or save as audio files (AIFF, M4A, WAV) for use in other programs (e.g., GarageBand, Cubase, etc.) or to share on the Internet.New Features for 2018 MAC edition:There are over 50 exciting new features in Band-in-a-Box 2018 for Mac. We're introducing 'Video RealTracks' for Mac, which work like RealTracks, but also include videos of the musician's performance.

You can make a video of a single musician or a band video, optionally with a chord sheet or notation, and you can even add your own videos to the final mix. The Audio Chord Wizard has been redesigned and is now built into Band-in-a-Box. The Audio Harmonies feature has been added, including Audio Transcription, which converts a monophonic audio track to MIDI (notation), and Fix Tuning to fix an out-of-tune audio recording, and more! You can save the Notation window to a video in sync with the audio track playback. We've added notation support for time signatures like 12/8, 6/8, and 9/8. The Toolbar has been enhanced with skins and more customization.

The popular Song Titles Browser is enhanced with more songs (now 10,000), filters, and the ability to show titles that work with a specific style. StylePicker enhancements include a mixer-like control allowing clear display and style customization. The RealDrums Picker has been enhanced with the option to find similar RealDrums.

The Audio Edit window is redesigned with new a GUI and features. And many more!We've added 202 new RealTracks, double the 101 that we've often released in the past! We've also made a new Xtra Styles PAK 4 with 160 new Xtra Styles. We also have over 120 new RealStyles for our new RealTracks including Americana, Klezmer, Top-40, Jazz Strings Pads, Vocals (oohs and aahs), New Crooner 'Shout' BigBand styles, and more! There is a 49-PAK with 40 additional new RealTracks on top of the 202 above, so in total an amazing 242 new RealTracks are available!PG Music Band In A Box 2018 Pro Software for Mac Features. Band-in-a-Box 2018.

RealBand 2018. Pro RealCombos: Over 300 RealTracks instruments in 100 Bands!. 54 MIDI SuperTracks. Over 400 MIDI Styles. Over 100 MIDI Soloists. Over 60 MIDI Melodists.

21 Nature Sounds and Percussion Loops. 22 Artist Performances. 1,000 Dubstep, Modern, and Top 40 LoopsCALIFORNIA PROPOSITION 65 WARNINGWARNING: Cancer and Reproductive Harm. PG Music Band In A Box 2018 Pro Software for Mac System Requirements.

Mac OS X 10.5 and higher. Intel Processor.

Minimum 512 MB RAM. Screen Resolution: 1024x768 or higher. At least 2 GB recommended for the main Band-in-a-Box® program.

Copyright © 1996-2020 American Musical Supply, Inc. All rights reserved. American Musical Supply reserves the right to correct pricing and/or product specifications in the event of typographical errors found in our print catalog or on our website. If a product is listed at an incorrect price due to such errors or because of inaccurate information received from a supplier, American Musical Supply shall have the right to refuse or cancel any orders placed, whether or not the order has been confirmed and your credit card charged. If your credit card has already been charged for the purchase and your order is canceled, American Musical Supply will issue a credit to your credit card account in the amount of the charge.