Please don't get me wrong; I've turned dozens of musicians on to BIAB. These are usually guitarist/singer/songwriters that want to produce a high quality demo for submission to Nashville publishers or labels. It's the perfect tool for that purpose and Peter and I discussed this at great length years ago, back when BIAB was at Version 3 - as a DOS program only.

But, unless it's a band you work with on a regular basis, Nashville publishers and labels are primarily interested in the melody, the lyrics, and the singer. Adding musical credits are not appropriate for submitting singer or songwriter demos.

As I said before, if it's for fun, yes, give BIAB credit and turn other people on to the wonderful possibilities of BIAB. But if it's for pro use, you're better off keeping it to yourself from a professional standpoint; it could (and will) backfire on you.

How? Detailing that you used BIAB to create the backing tracks causes attention to be diverted to the backing tracks, rather than the song and/or the singer. If you're submitting a song to Nashville or want them to consider you as a singer, you want them focusing on the words and melody, or just your voice.

A question: Should you credit Autotune on your demo, if you're a bad singer?