First of all, you only gave us two choices (although polls usually don't play that well here, in general). So it's either wonderful or it's really bad.

Usually, depending on the type of music, it's somewhere in between. And it's generally pretty good at least picking up the bass note of the chord. But it's not a silver bullet. You still have to apply a little bit of music theory to fix it up afterwards.

To me, that fact that it works at all is pretty amazing. I don't think comparing this to ripping MP3's from CD's is fair. When it gets down to it, that's pretty much just an exercise in math. I would compare it having software that analyzes a photograph or a painting and then tells you "what it sees". That's what the chord analyzer is trying to do for music. Software could probably pick out faces and bodies in a posed photograph, but what about a painting by Jackson Pollock or Picasso?

You also didn't say what kind of music you were trying to get the chords for.

Does the chord analyzer still have a ways to go? Sure it does; it hasn't even been available that long. But I think it's a pretty good start and I've gotten some pretty good results for rock and pop songs.

You also have to make sure you play by the rules...you must absolutely set Bar #1; you must have each bar defined on the beat (press F8 while you listen, if necessary). Some people have better luck by doubling the tempo and viewing each two beats as a single bar (which won't look very good in the chord grid), but will give you a higher granularity of chords.


John

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