Michael you will be amazed at what can be done with these programs. The thing to understand is they are simply tools. Pretty much everybody has an idea of what a van full of carpenters tools does but unless you're a journeyman carpenter with 20 years experience it doesn't mean you can buy that van full of tools and the next day go out and build yourself a house.

Same thing here with all these digital music programs. The more you learn how to use them the better the end result will be. It doesn't happen by itself. Buying Biab is like buying that van with ONE good tool in it, there's still other very useful and compatible tools you need to get plus put in the time to learn how to use them. Then you can start getting the pro level results you want.

Like everything else in life that you consider valuable you can't pick it up in a day or two. If Biab was so simple that you could learn it in a week, what's the point? Two weeks later you're bored and looking for something else.

Biab is incredibly deep if you're willing to dig. If all you do is pick a style, put in the chords and hit play well, you're taking about 95% of it's capabilities off the table. Style>Chords>Play is just to get you started. You can write your own styles, you can use the harmonizer to create horn sections, you can edit individual parts and then freeze the tracks so you don't lose it later, you can plug in audio loops to mix with other tracks, use different VST plugins and there's so much more I won't even go into here. If you run out of tracks, you can move the whole project into Real Band and continue there. RB adds a whole new and higher level of edit, plugin and mixing functions.

There's four year degrees in audio production and they all include software integration in a studio environment. Biab is in more studios than a lot of them are willing to admit.

Most of us are like you, experienced musicians who want to have some fun in a home studio and maybe use some of it on a gig. Think about how long it took you to get proficient on your horn and that's about how long it will take you to get proficient at digital audio work. This is what makes this such a worthwhile hobby, you're always learning new stuff and as soon as you do the wizards at PG come up with a new version that does all sorts of cool things. Just take it one step at a time, it will come.

Bob


Biab/RB latest build, Win 11 Pro, Ryzen 5 5600 G, 512 Gig SSD, 16 Gigs Ram, Steinberg UR22 MkII, Roland Sonic Cell, Kurzweil PC3, Hammond SK1, Korg PA3XPro, Garritan JABB, Hypercanvas, Sampletank 3, more.