<<How come this information has been so elusive, (at least for me)??
I assume this is in the BiaB manual somewhere??>>


The features used to achieve these results are explained in the BIAB manual but there's no way that all of the possibilities to how features can be used could never be anticipated and explained in the manual. The PG Music Forums are the best resource.

The process steps are mostly the same as what's required to create a backing track/click track combo in a DAW using BIAB exported tracks.

Many instruments in a BIAB project are stereo and a step must be taken to convert any stereo instrument track to a mono track because as noted in earlier posts, the BIAB Master Track renders as a stereo track. A stereo track with panning will have audio at some level across both tracks causing two issues.

One, some of the accompaniment track audio will be heard on the click track and

Two, the accompaniment audio panned to the click track will be lost from the accompaniment audio broadcast.

These issue is resolved by making sure both tracks (Click and accompaniment) are rendered mono tracks.

There should be no audible difference between a backing/click combo track created in BIAB and one created using any DAW. Which to choose really depends on what workflow you're most familiar and comfortable with using.

Charlie




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.