Originally Posted By: Gordon Scott


You do get continuous audio. The method by which it's generated is what changes.

BIAB switches essentially seamlessly from RealTrack sound to a section of audio generated using MIDI to control audio extracted from the same RealTrack source file, then switches back to RealTrack. What you get out of the end of that is continuous audio.

It's the sforzando synthesiser that interprets the MIDI data into the audio, pretty much like any MIDI would interpreted.

...
In a 40-bar song, we might have 18 bars of RealTrack, two bars of "playable RealTrack" (MIDI) and 20 further bars of RealTrack. There would then be three segments of respectively 18, 2 and 20 bars duration. The first and last would be normal RealTrack play and the two-bar segment between them would comprise audio generated by sforzando.


OK thanks Gordon!
It sounds like this Playable RealTrack might actually work for me.
But it seems I'll need to upgrade before I can try it out.
I have BIAB v. 2021.


A BIAB user for more than 30 years (if you can believe it) !