@MusicStudent
Unfortunately, when you say “export to a DAW”, you are talking about a cake, if it’s baked, it’s done. You can not “unbake” a cake back to flour, eggs, sugar, and milk.

Say, you export all your audio tracks from BiaB to your DAW, and spend a day doing editing, comping, adding MIDI and VSTs, to complete a song. The next morning, you just feel like you want to make a few slight changes, such as change a few chords here and there, insert one bar here and there, regenerate a bit of guitar here and there, so on and so forth. Guess what? You have to go back to BiaB to regen everything and your previous day’s work in the DAW is pretty much ruined.

Trust me, I’ve been using this “BiaB to WAV to DAW” approach for a long time, until recently I had a spiritual awakening.

My point is, music production is not a laser guided sidewinder missile, and you won’t hit your target with one shot. It is more of a mortar attack, and you’ve got to take several tries before you can hit your target. Luckily, BiaB is here to provide unlimited ammunitions.


A Canadian music producer, singer songwriter, composer, and professional guitarist.