The program is called Melodyne and it's been discussed here a lot. The thing is while the promise is good in practice it's apparently useful but still not quite there. There are a few here who use it and they say it's pretty good for single lines and vocal correction but only fair for chords and pretty useless for multitrack stuff. It's also not cheap either. It works best with a clean pure sound and that's hard to find. Audio to midi conversion programs have been talked about for years and there's been a lot of vaporware floating around but nobody has managed to really nail it yet

The best thing for you is to get a midi guitar. When you input midi notes you then have access to all the midi editing functions built in to these programs. Also, something I think you will really like are the Real Charts. Quite a few Real Tracks (but not all) have been transcribed the old fashioned way and manually entered as midi notes. This is not some kind of computer conversion, they were transcribed by ear. Mac mentioned a few years ago he did some of that. That means you can hear a Brent Mason solo and see the whole thing written out on the lead sheet. You can also cut and paste the midi info into a separate track and set up a midi synth to play it. When you do that you lose all the live nuance the player put into it but if you want to hear a trumpet or something play Brent's solo you can.

These programs really have a lot to offer.

Bob


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