<< Speaking of multiple styles, here's another little trick I do with cakewalk. I will import a tune multiple times into cakewalk, each occurrence set to a different BiaB style. Then I will pick and choose instruments from the various styles and assemble my own style from them. I've been able to pull off some pretty remarkable stuff doing this. I've also been able to grow my number of BiaB instruments from five or six to fifteen, twenty, or more where I'll usually change out the instrumentation patches just so things don't sound monotonous. Not all playing at once, of course, but using them interleaved. Often I will modify the notation so that it all works together. Works very well. >>

Programming with Multi Styles is something BIAB does really well and it's a feature that's been around for a long time. I'm reposting my comment to a discussion on a BIAB Facebook page that revolved around BIAB being only good for jamming, simple songs, and scratch ideas and that anything more complex requires exporting BIAB generated tracks over into a DAW.

I'll repeat to you what I stated in that discussion, that I don't suggest you need to change your current workflow or that anything you are doing is wrong in any way, but I'm sure you will be amazed with the speed and ease you can replicate what you're currently doing with assembling your own custom styles using Cakewalk and even more, entirely within BIAB. It's easy to create custom Multi Styles and any project can have up to 24 Part Markers, each with two variations. PG Music staff has also created RealStyles that use the same instruments but each style will add a different soloist instrument. Many variations can be found in the Campfire Styles. For instance, you can start with a style that offers only a strumming acoustic guitar or fingerpicked guitar, the next style offers those same guitars in their own style. The style after that adds a fiddle, another may replace the fiddle with a mandolin, then another replaces the mandolin with a dobro and so on. Part markers can be replaced in any measure and as many times as desired and each offers an A and B variation the same as the Blue and Green Part Markers we are all familiar with.

In an attempt to help and inspire BIAB users. I want to correct some misconceptions of the ease of programming BIAB and its prowess as an alternative to a DAW.
The screen shot I've posted below is comprised of and executes four Styles, 20 Style changes, 8 guitar parts, some rhythm and two soloists, 2 saxophone soloists, 3 drum styles and 4 bass styles.
I calculate it takes 35 individual tracks to generate and export before you would even begin to cut and paste the tracks and create your arrangement to replicate this single render BIAB Chord Chart in a DAW.
It took about 3 minutes to write this Chord Chart, insert the part markers and generate. That's an impossible time to match with tracks exported from BIAB, opening and then importing them into a DAW and as stated, there's still all of the arranging of the tracks to do with a normal DAW workflow.
There's some pre-Chord Chart preparation in auditioning the Styles, selecting soloists and the other individual instruments but all of that has to occur regardless of whether the song is rendered in BIAB or moved to a DAW.
I'm not suggesting anyone should change any workflow you may be using, that's successful for you or that anything is wrong with what you're doing. All I'm saying is that BIAB can create a multi instrument, multi style, multi soloist complete song arrangement in a 3 minute programed, single first generation render.
All this is done with the tools and techniques you use every day and on every project but just doing in a way you haven't learned yet. The three video links attached provide all of the information necessary to those that may not know how to save a RealStyle, understand and apply Part Markers and how to audition Styles and RealTrack instruments for a song project.
Making Your Own RealStyle in Band-in-a-Box
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a813VaOUNZM
Band-in-a-Box for Windows: Part Markers Overview
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bmcbwJDl1oA&t=146s
Band in a Box "How To Get A Fuller Sound Tutorial" Henry Clarke
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kDjx_WMXwAs&t=71s

Attached Files (Click to download or enlarge) (Only available when you are logged in)
Multi Styles.JPG (282.99 KB, 57 downloads)

BIAB 2025:RB 2025, Latest builds: Dell Optiplex 7040 Desktop; Windows-10-64 bit, Intel Core i7-6700 3.4GHz CPU and 16 GB Ram Memory.