This causes a lot of confusion. Real Tracks Styles are not Styles at all in the traditional sense.

A standard midi style is a style that can be written note for note and given the weighting that tells Biab how to play that style. This is the main reason Bob Norton won't write his styles for Real Tracks because you can't use them to create note for note specific licks like you can with a midi style. RT's are prerecorded audio files and the regular style making functions have no effect on them. RT "Styles" are really just demos of what a certain combination of RT's can sound like and as we all know we can mix and match them any way we want. The only thing you have control over with a combination of RT's is the tempo and key sig. They're prerecorded so no Style making is involved.

Someone posted a good way to keep track of these combinations. Create a simple 8 or 12 bar demo song using a given set of RT's and name it whatever you want. Since it's a song not a Style you're not restricted to the cryptic Style naming convention. The name can tell you exactly what it is and then save those songs in a separate directory. Call it RT Styles if you want but again, they're not Styles at all. When you open one up delete or overwrite the chords you used originally and remember to do a "save as" with a new name.

Bob


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