![]() ![]() ![]() ** Having the notes next to the little piano keys would be helpful in understanding what's going on without having to purely do it by ear - without that it's akin to trying to paint a picture with the color picker in grayscale. In any case though, basically making it so I can see everything that's going to happen at a given time. like do i use the same vocal chain with one a. I was thinking you could try treating the UI to work more like a painting instead of different sheets of music per instrument, so basically keep the existing grid, but treat the music score as a single canvas and "paint" an instrument at a specific note and specific time which covers all instruments except percussion, which you could do with a separate translucent layer that comes up when you hold a key or mouse button or something so that the timing matches up but the context of what happens at that time (the horizontal axis) changes, maybe based on what type of instrument (drums, tambourine, etc)? I don't know, just throwing something out there. Ive been doing it for awhile but when it comes to bussing and transition it can get huge in track count. I ended up doing "I have a drum here and I know I want to wait a couple of half beats and then.wait what was the next drum beat? Oh ok got that harmonica note, now for banjo do.wait what was the drum? " You're basically asking the player to be able to imagine the final product but only being able to look at and work with single slices at once. Like if Passpartout The Starving Artist had a separate canvas for each color and you could only view one canvas at a time. ** With the current layout I found it difficult to make the instruments work well together. One Man Band is the software version of the digital music instruments known as arranger keyboards, home keyboards and workstations. I really like the premise and loved Passpartout The Starving Artist. I That being said I have just have a couple of suggestions: ![]()
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