How To Edit GarageBand MIDI In The Piano Roll Editor - The Piano Roll Editor shows the notes in a GarageBand MIDI region as colored bars in a time grid. Horizontal lines show the time position, while vertical lines indicate pitch. A keyboard along the left edge of the Piano Roll Editor provides a reference for the pitches of notes. The Piano Roll inspector, to the left of the notes area, includes controls for editing MIDI regions and notes. Open the Piano Roll Editor Do one of the following: Select a software instrument track or a MIDI region, then click the Editors button Editors button. Select a software instrument track or a MIDI region, then choose View > Show Editor. The Piano Roll Editor opens below the Tracks area. On the left are controls for quantizing the timing and pitch of MIDI regions, adjusting their pitch, and editing the velocity of MIDI notes. Along the top of the Piano Roll Editor is a ruler showing time divisions, and a menu bar with MIDI Draw, Cat...
GarageBand Recording: Use The Track Header Controls - Track header overview, each track includes a track header that displays the track name and icon, and features a number of track controls. Default track header controls include Record Enable, Mute, and Solo buttons on all tracks, and for audio tracks, a Monitoring button. You can customize the track header by showing or hiding different track header controls, to optimize your workflow. You can also resize the track headers to give yourself more room to work in the Tracks area. Configure the track header using the shortcut menu Control-click the track header. Choose Track Header Components from the shortcut menu, then choose individual items from the submenu. How To Mute GarageBand Tracks You can silence, or mute, a track so that you don’t hear it when you play the project . Muting tracks is useful when you want to hear how the project sounds without the track, compare alternative versions of a track, or try differen...
GarageBand Recording: How To Record With Basic Tracks - Tracks help you organize and control the sound of the recordings and other material in a project. You record and arrange audio and MIDI regions on tracks in the Tracks area. A GarageBand project can include the following track types: Audio tracks: Contain audio regions from audio recordings, audio Apple Loops, and imported audio files. Software instrument tracks: Contain MIDI regions from software instrument recordings, software instrument Apple Loops, and imported MIDI files. GarageBand Drummer tracks: Work similarly to software instrument tracks, but are automatically generated. For more information, see Drummer Editor overview. Each track has a track header located to the left of the track, which shows the track’s name and icon. Track headers also contain controls that you can use to mute, solo, and adjust the volume level and pan position of the track, and control the track in other ways. When you create a track, ...
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