I should explain.

Let's say I've put together a 32-bar piece of music that adheres to the aaba song form. I've set it up to play 3 choruses. But rather than having these little 8-bar "bridge" sections in every chorus, I would like to add a completely separate bridge section to the piece, say, between the 2nd and 3rd choruses. I might even want a style change, but probably not an instrument change, which will make things somewhat tricky, I suspect. This type of song form is very common in popular music, and I'm surprised I'm having such a tough time trying to pull it off.

So what we would have would be:

Chorus 1: aaba
Chorus 2: aaba
Bridge: freeform
Chorus 3: aaba
(end)

I've read through the help section on endings -- 1st and 2nd and DS al fines and codas and what have you, but they all stay within the 32 bar framework. I'm wondering if I might, for example, set up a "c" section beyond the song in the gray area and then refer to it from the song and then from it back to the song. I've tried doing this once and wound up with a total mess. However, it seems to me that it just might be possible if I were able to arrange things correctly.

Any suggestions as to how I can do this? The way I'm doing it now is I just use BiaB in a freeform format and input the choruses and bridge section(s) one at a time, then set it up to play just a single, very long chorus. This works fine, although one of the drawbacks to this is I lose the variations that take place when the chorus repeats. And sometimes that's not such a minor detail, for example, when the drums change from side stick to snare and then back. That can be a pretty significant change to the feel of a piece. Now, if the drums are MIDI, I can always go into the track and edit it the way I want. But for RealDrums, it isn't possible. Well, I guess it is if I want to cut and splice. Added work, though, added tedium.

So anyway, it would be cool if I could do this. It would save a lot of space on the display and I wouldn't have to be printing out multiple pages of sheet music -- or at least, not as many.