Previous Thread
Index
Next Thread
Print Thread
Go To
#49611 12/15/09 08:45 AM
Off-Topic
Joined: Aug 2009
Posts: 3,158
Veteran
OP Offline
Veteran
Joined: Aug 2009
Posts: 3,158
Hi all,

I wonder if someone could briefly tell me (a non techie person) what is the difference between realtracks and samples that come with other musical software?

Don't other software packages that have samples also get real musicians to initially play the sample to start with? so I'm finding it difficult to understand the underlying differences.

Thanks
Musiclover

Last edited by musiclover; 12/15/09 08:46 AM.

Musiclover

My music https://www.youtube.com/user/donegalprideofall

Windows 10 (64bit) M-Audio Fast Track Pro, Band in a Box 2025, Cubase 14, Cakewalk and far too many VST plugins that I probably don't need or will ever use smile
Off-Topic
Joined: May 2003
Posts: 8,021
Veteran
Offline
Veteran
Joined: May 2003
Posts: 8,021
Well technically all digital music is a sample. It just depends on the length of the sample. A CD is a very long sample. The samples that are part of a synth are typically very short samples. One note that then gets stretched out. Sometimes more notes. The more notes the better the result. RTs are sample of complete phrases that can be one measure long and up to 8 measures long. We call them loops.


John
ESI Gigaport HD+
Lenovo Turion II /4 Gig Ram/ Win7x64 be
15.6" Monitor
"The only Band is a Real Band"
www.wintertexaninfo.com/BANDS/JohnnyD.php
Off-Topic
Joined: Jun 2000
Posts: 2,217
Veteran
Offline
Veteran
Joined: Jun 2000
Posts: 2,217
.
>>...RTs are sample of complete phrases that can be one measure long and up to 8 measures long. We call them loops...>>>

Well, pretty much yeah. There is a bunch of semantics that comes up here. There is an important between "loops" and Realtracks. Lots of programs can do loops, but only BiaB and RBand can do Realtracks. The two function differently.

I hope someone will pop up and explain the difference in detail.


Flatfoot sez: Call me when 'Talent-in-a-Box' is ready to ship! -- [8{>

Got some tunes on You Tube:
http://www.youtube.com/user/flatfoot50
.
My BiaB lesson site:
http://jdwolfe0.wixsite.com/learnbiab
Off-Topic
Joined: May 2003
Posts: 8,021
Veteran
Offline
Veteran
Joined: May 2003
Posts: 8,021
The only Real difference is that the program does it automatically and randomly. Otherwise it's pretty much the same.


John
ESI Gigaport HD+
Lenovo Turion II /4 Gig Ram/ Win7x64 be
15.6" Monitor
"The only Band is a Real Band"
www.wintertexaninfo.com/BANDS/JohnnyD.php
Off-Topic
Joined: Jan 2006
Posts: 2,458
Veteran
Offline
Veteran
Joined: Jan 2006
Posts: 2,458
What they said. I think what you're really asking is, "Are RealTracks recordings of actual instruments, and if so how do they differ from loops?"

And the answer is, yes, they are real recorded instruments, and they differ from loops in that (a) Band In A Box can adjust them to whatever chord you want in a given measure automatically, so that you only have to set the instrument and type in the chords, and (b) they provide some variation, so that on subsequent plays you don't always get the same loop in a given measure.

This makes it different from, say, Acid Pro, where you can transpose a whole song at once, or any given loop (or split section of a loop) at once, or transpose at a marker point, but you can't just easily change the chord structure, and you have to vary the loops manually (which I have done on a number of songs, and which is a Big Pain In The Tuchus).


Best,
Tom Smith
Win10/64 • i7-8700K • 24 GB RAM
BIAB 2026 • Reaper 7.57 • Izotope MPS
AKG C1000S • IK iRig I/O Pro
Off-Topic
Joined: Jan 2002
Posts: 10,199
Veteran
Offline
Veteran
Joined: Jan 2002
Posts: 10,199
Correct me if I'm wrong, but another really big thing that I've noticed about Real Tracks is that you can actually change the individual notes in the song, using the RePlay feature. This is a huge difference from Loops, which are not alterable at all.

Gary


I'm blessed watching God do what He does best. I've had a few rough years, and I'm still not back to where I want to be, but I'm on the way and things are looking far better now than what they were!
Off-Topic
Joined: May 2003
Posts: 8,021
Veteran
Offline
Veteran
Joined: May 2003
Posts: 8,021
Gary,
You are both right and wrong. When you hit play in BIAB and the song regenerates the program just chooses different loops to play based on a set of parameters that is built into the program. You could do the same thing in Acid IF you had the patience. That's the beauty of RTs it's totally automated and unpredictable in a good way but they are just loops that are being manipulated in a very ingenious way.


John
ESI Gigaport HD+
Lenovo Turion II /4 Gig Ram/ Win7x64 be
15.6" Monitor
"The only Band is a Real Band"
www.wintertexaninfo.com/BANDS/JohnnyD.php
Off-Topic
Joined: Dec 2002
Posts: 12,910
Veteran
Offline
Veteran
Joined: Dec 2002
Posts: 12,910
Quote:

Correct me if I'm wrong, but another really big thing that I've noticed about Real Tracks is that you can actually change the individual notes in the song, using the RePlay feature. This is a huge difference from Loops, which are not alterable at all.

Gary




You may have something there. I have seen references to Real-Charts which may be editable for real tracks. I have not tried that yet, but it would be interesting. Hard to believe they can do that. But they have certainly do some other stuff which is amazing.


BIAB – 2026, Reaper (current), i7-12700F Processor, 32GB DDR4-3200MHz RAM, Motu Audio Express 6x6 - My SoundCloud.

Off-Topic
Joined: Dec 2000
Posts: 12,840
Veteran
Offline
Veteran
Joined: Dec 2000
Posts: 12,840
Quote:

I have seen references to Real-Charts which may be editable for real tracks.




Editing a "RealChart" won't allow you to change how the RealTracks play. RealCharts are a relatively new feature that PGMusic implemented to allow you see (rather than just hear) what the RealTrack is doing, as well as allow you to save a MIDI rendition of the RealTrack (albeit without some of the nuances of the "live" recording).


John

Laptop-HP Omen I7 Win11Pro 32GB 12TB SSD
Desktop-ASUS-I7 Win10Pro 32GB 12TB SATA

BB2026/UMC204HD&404HD/Casios/Cakewalk/Reaper/Studio One/Notion/Dorico/Noteworthy/NI/Halion/IK

http://www.sus4chord.com (under rehosting/construction)
Off-Topic
Joined: Jan 2008
Posts: 39
M
Enthusiast
Offline
Enthusiast
M
Joined: Jan 2008
Posts: 39
As I understand it...

Each Realtrack is a collection of samples of a real instrument. This collection comprises audio recordings of the same instrument playing in different keys/different chords/patterns all at the same tempo. It also includes recordings of the instrument playing holds and shots etc

BIAB's function when playing Realtracks is as a VERY sophisticated sample player. It looks at the tempo you have entered, the chords entered, part markers and any rests/holds etc. It then selects one of the samples in the realtrack that is suitable based upon these variables, and speeds it up or slows it down to match the tempo (the sample speed is changed so the instrument playing sounds faster or slower than the recorded tempo, but the pitch of the notes stays the same).

That is the clever bit!

BIAB also looks at the preceding and following chords when choosing which sample to use, making it a pretty impressive piece of engineering.

The Realtracks also contain variations for each chord/pattern, so when you regenerate a track BIAB may choose a different sample, still appropriate for the song bar but different to the previous generation. Hence it's always worth generating a few 'takes' of each instrument to see which you like best

I would imagine that the Realtracks are built up using bars as a basic measure. If you look at the tutorial on this site on how to create your own Real DRUMS, it will give you an idea of the logic. However, realtracks also accomodate key and chord changes which is what makes them so impressive and almost impossible to make yourself!

Hope this helps

regards
Martin

Off-Topic
Joined: May 2000
Posts: 38,502
M
Mac Offline
Veteran
Offline
Veteran
M
Joined: May 2000
Posts: 38,502
RealTrack source files are actual complete recordings of the instrumentalist playing an entire song along to backing tracks.

The magic comes in the splicing and dicing to create those "loops". Which they really aren't. I'd call them, "phrases".


--Mac

Off-Topic
Joined: Jun 2005
Posts: 7,697
Veteran
Offline
Veteran
Joined: Jun 2005
Posts: 7,697
Quote:

Hi all,

I wonder if someone could briefly tell me (a non techie person) what is the difference between realtracks and samples that come with other musical software?

Don't other software packages that have samples also get real musicians to initially play the sample to start with? so I'm finding it difficult to understand the underlying differences.

Thanks
Musiclover




Everybody has come at your answer from different directions and are pretty much correct. I'm going to make an assumption as to what you meant by your question.
When most musicians refer to samples they mean individual notes like when I play a sax patch on my Kurzweil keyboard. I hit a key, I hear a note that sounds like a sax. Change patches to piano, I hit a note, I hear a piano and so on. When you say "samples that come with other software" I'm assuming you mean single note samples like a piano library of a sampled Steinway or whatever. Loops are different and I wouldn't use the term loops in reference to RT's. Sort of I guess but really quite different.
Real Tracks do not go down to level of a single note, I think the smallest increment is a full bar but I'm not sure. RT's are studio recordings of phrases played in a whole bunch of different styles by pro players. As audio files you can not alter them unless you're a real wizard with audio editing. The notes that appear in notation are simply a way for you to see what is being played. Changing the note in the display has no effect on the audio file just like you can't change a note in the guitar part on a commercial CD. There are both good and bad in this. The good is obvious, the outstanding audio quality and the fact it's a live player laying down the phrases not just individual notes. The bad is they all start sounding the same after a while. Say you like the Eagles type of sound so you do 10 tunes using the Southern Rock strumming guitar. True, there are some variations but it's clear that those tracks were laid down by the same player in the same style and your 10 tunes are going to have essentially the same guitar part. That's why the library of RT's is already huge and getting larger. There are lots of different strumming guitar parts now and even though some may not match what the Eagles did, they can sound pretty good in the mix. The more the better from that point of view.
Using midi, you can write out exact parts with detailed variations that fit your tune perfectly but then those are midi parts and you have to trigger a synth with them. Some midi parts can sound pretty good but nothing like a live player. That's why people spend thousands on different hardware and software synths and then many hours tweaking them in their computers to make them sound as close to a real player as they can.
There's no one perfect answer but the RT's really do add a lot imho. I work mostly in Real Band using a combination of midi and audio tracks including RT's. We're trying to duplicate the sound of a multi million dollar studio using pro players here in a bedroom in my case. It's amazing how good it can sound now.

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.
Off-Topic
Joined: Jan 2002
Posts: 10,199
Veteran
Offline
Veteran
Joined: Jan 2002
Posts: 10,199
I tested this.

I went and took a song I had loaded, opened up a Real Tracks style for it, with a "String" part, which was in actuality a trumpet sound. In the notation editing window, I am able to move the notes around and completely rework that part. After moving the notes to where I want them, if I press Replay, the song will start over again, and the changes I made to the part are still there!

Of course if you press Play, the parts will regenerate.

So, loops can not do that, Real Tracks will.

Gary


I'm blessed watching God do what He does best. I've had a few rough years, and I'm still not back to where I want to be, but I'm on the way and things are looking far better now than what they were!
Off-Topic
Joined: May 2000
Posts: 38,502
M
Mac Offline
Veteran
Offline
Veteran
M
Joined: May 2000
Posts: 38,502
Quote:

I tested this.

I went and took a song I had loaded, opened up a Real Tracks style for it, with a "String" part, which was in actuality a trumpet sound. In the notation editing window, I am able to move the notes around and completely rework that part. After moving the notes to where I want them, if I press Replay, the song will start over again, and the changes I made to the part are still there!

Of course if you press Play, the parts will regenerate.

So, loops can not do that, Real Tracks will.

Gary




That just isn't correct.

Don't know what you had going on at that end, but whatever it was, maybe fooled you, but you cannot do that with a RealTrack.

I just opened up several different RealTracks and tried it to make sure. Don't work that way. You can change the note names on the staff, but the RealTrack will not follow those at all.

And if it did, it would not be a RealTrack, it would be a common ordinary MIDI sampler...


--Mac

Off-Topic
Joined: Jan 2008
Posts: 39
M
Enthusiast
Offline
Enthusiast
M
Joined: Jan 2008
Posts: 39
Agree Mac

If you think of it in terms of resolution, then midi has the greatest resolution i.e. down to a single note (actually much further than this). Realtracks resolution is much lower, i.e. down to a bar. If you have a Realtrack that sounds different each time you play it, it's because BIAB is choosing a different phrase from the Realtrack source file for that bar.

So, if your track is responding to individual notes that you are changing, it must be a midi track


Regards

M

Off-Topic
Joined: Jan 2005
Posts: 4,900
Veteran
Offline
Veteran
Joined: Jan 2005
Posts: 4,900
Agreed but I believe RTs resolve down to a quarter note duration as you can programme 4 chords in a bar


Follow That Dream

Sam
Karaoke King

--------------------

Turning that corner again - I have to keep following that dream, no matter what
Off-Topic
Joined: Jul 2000
Posts: 27,517
Veteran
Offline
Veteran
Joined: Jul 2000
Posts: 27,517
Or maybe resolve to an eighth note, because it can accommodate pushes. That's different, of course, from accommodating eight chords per bar; it's still four chords, but all four could be pushed, making eight possible positions.


BIAB 2026 Win Audiophile. Software: Fender Studio One 8, Swam horns, Acoustica-7, Notion 6, Song Master Pro, Win 11 Home. Hardware: Intel i9, 32 Gb; Presonus Quantom HD8 & Faderport 8, Royer 121, Adam Sub8 & Neumann 120 monitors.
Off-Topic
Joined: Jan 2008
Posts: 39
M
Enthusiast
Offline
Enthusiast
M
Joined: Jan 2008
Posts: 39
Good point Sam, I knew those i.e.'s should have been e.g.'s !

Previous Thread
Next Thread
Go To

Link Copied to Clipboard
ChatPG

Ask sales and support questions about Band-in-a-Box using natural language.

ChatPG's knowledge base includes the full Band-in-a-Box User Manual and sales information from the website.

PG Music News
Update to Build 10 of RealBand® 2026 for Windows®!

If you're already using RealBand 2026 for Windows, download build 10 to get all the latest additions and enhancements.

Band-in-a-Box® 2025 for Mac® users: Build 904 now available!

If you're already using Band-in-a-Box® 2025 for Mac®, make sure to grab the latest update! Build 904 is now available for download and includes the newest additions and enhancements from our team.

Band-in-a-Box® 2026 for Windows® users: Build 1237 is now available!

Already a Band-in-a-Box 2026 for Windows user? Stay up to date and download the build 1237 to get all the latest additions and enhancements.

PowerTracks Pro 2026 for Windows is Here!

PowerTracks 2026 is here—bringing powerful new enhancements designed to make your production workflow faster, smoother, and more intuitive than ever.

The enhanced Mixer now shows Track Type and Instrument icons for instant track recognition, while a new grid option simplifies editing views. Non-floating windows adopt a modern title bar style, replacing the legacy blue bar.

The Master Volume is now applied at the end of the audio chain for consistent levels and full-signal master effects.

Tablature now includes a “Save bends when saving XML” option for improved compatibility with PG Music tools. Plus, you can instantly match all track heights with a simple Ctrl-release after resizing, and Add2 chords from MGU/SGU files are now fully supported... and more!

Get started today—first-time packages start at just $49.

Already using PowerTracks Pro Audio? Upgrade for as little as $29 and enjoy the latest improvements!

Order now!

Band-in-a-Box 2026 for Windows Special Offers End Tomorrow (January 15th, 2026) at 11:59 PM PST!

Time really is running out! Save up to 50% on Band-in-a-Box® 2026 for Windows® upgrades and receive a FREE Bonus PAK—only when you order by 11:59 PM PST on Thursday, January 15, 2026!

We've added many major new features and new content in a redesigned Band-in-a-Box® 2026 for Windows®!

Version 2026 introduces a modernized GUI redesign across the program, with updated toolbars, refreshed windows, smoother workflows, and a new Dark Mode option. There’s also a new side toolbar for quicker access to commonly used windows, and the new Multi-View feature lets you arrange multiple windows as layered panels without overlap, making it easier to customize your workspace.

Another exciting new addition is the new AI-Notes feature, which can transcribe polyphonic audio into MIDI. You can view the results in notation or play them back as MIDI, and choose whether to process an entire track or focus on specific parts like drums, bass, guitars/piano, or vocals. There's over 100 new features in Band-in-a-Box® 2026 for Windows®.

There's an amazing collection of new content too, including 202 RealTracks, new RealStyles, MIDI SuperTracks, Instrumental Studies, “Songs with Vocals” Artist Performance Sets, Playable RealTracks Set 5, two RealDrums Stems sets, XPro Styles PAK 10, Xtra Styles PAK 21, and much more!

Upgrade your Band-in-a-Box for Windows to save up to 50% on most Band-in-a-Box® 2026 upgrade packages!

Plus, when you order your Band-in-a-Box® 2026 upgrade during our special, you'll receive a Free Bonus PAK of exciting new add-ons.

If you need any help deciding which package is the best option for you, just let us know. We are here to help!

Band-in-a-Box® 2026 for Windows® Special Offers Extended Until January 15, 2026!

Good news! You still have time to upgrade to the latest version of Band-in-a-Box® for Windows® and save. Our Band-in-a-Box® 2026 for Windows® special now runs through January 15, 2025!

We've packed Band-in-a-Box® 2026 with major new features, enhancements, and an incredible lineup of new content! The program now sports a sleek, modern GUI redesign across the entire interface, including updated toolbars, refreshed windows, smoother workflows, a new dark mode option, and more. The brand-new side toolbar provides quicker access to key windows, while the new Multi-View feature lets you arrange multiple windows as layered panels without overlap, creating a flexible, clutter-free workspace. We have an amazing new “AI-Notes” feature. This transcribes polyphonic audio into MIDI so you can view it in notation or play it back as MIDI. You can process an entire track (all pitched instruments and drums) or focus on individual parts like drums, bass, guitars/piano, or vocals. There's an amazing collection of new content too, including 202 RealTracks, new RealStyles, MIDI SuperTracks, Instrumental Studies, “Songs with Vocals” Artist Performance Sets, Playable RealTracks Set 5, two RealDrums Stems sets, XPro Styles PAK 10, Xtra Styles PAK 21, and much more!

There are over 100 new features in Band-in-a-Box® 2026 for Windows®.

When you order purchase Band-in-a-Box® 2026 before 11:59 PM PST on January 15th, you'll also receive a Free Bonus PAK packed with exciting new add-ons.

Upgrade to Band-in-a-Box® 2026 for Windows® today! Check out the Band-in-a-Box® packages page for all the purchase options available.

Happy New Year!

Thank you for being part of the Band-in-a-Box® community.

Wishing you and yours a very happy 2026—Happy New Year from all of us at PG Music!

Forum Statistics
Forums57
Topics86,092
Posts800,129
Members40,033
Most Online44,367
Mar 4th, 2026
Newest Members
Matt1575, Christian210, jaycallahanart, roshan2121, Din
40,033 Registered Users
Top Posters(30 Days)
MarioD 140
rsdean 96
DC Ron 92
WaoBand 77
DrDan 61
Today's Birthdays
jamline, JazzMAn68
Powered by UBB.threads™ PHP Forum Software 7.7.5