Version 7 of BIAB also saw the addition of an Intelligent Humanise function. This second melody track can be recorded to in exactly the same way as the first one or, obviously, used to store the lead line generated by the Soloist feature. Essentially this makes BIAB a 2‑track sequencer with an additional six tracks of accompaniment. Rather than using a dedicated track for such a solo, BIAB's programmers simply created a second melody track. Add a harmony instrument and the result is quite staggering. The generated solo can be viewed in the notation window and printed out - particularly useful if you've generated a solo that you'd like to learn to play. There are presets, of course, but the 'Soloist Maker' lets you loose on the parameters to create your own over‑the‑top lead instrumentalist. These include the instrument, note range, type of solo, phrasing style (including length of and space between phrases), and that usually indefinable quality of how far outside the norm the playing should be. The programmers have analysed the playing styles of many, primarily jazz, instrumentalists and worked out a way to break down the essence of the soloist into a number of parameters. This feature allows you to put together the backing track for the rest of your song and then add an automatic solo on top.
![pg music band in a box pg music band in a box](https://www.arsov.net/SoundBytes/Images/2015-03/BIAB-RealBand.jpg)
What happens if, say, you're an excellent rhythm guitarist but have no pretensions on the lead‑playing front? BIAB isn't a lot of use to you, even with its melody line, unless it can play a great, improvised lead line. Version 7 saw PG Music, the Canadian‑based company behind BIAB, introducing a host of very innovative new features, including the important 'Soloist'. Even better, accompaniments could be exported as MIDI Files for further editing within a sequencer. Bass and piano parts could be recorded via a MIDI keyboard, with macros included to deal with common bass runs and jazz chords.
![pg music band in a box pg music band in a box](https://www.bhphotovideo.com/images/images500x500/PG_Music_BBE00754_Band_in_a_Box_EverythingPAK_MIDI_709750.jpg)
Drum patterns used a separate grid akin to the LCD display found on many drum machines. Many Styles were included as part of the package (over 100 with version 5), but the User Styles feature also allowed one to create patterns and sub‑patterns, allocating a 'weight' to each, which determined, to an extent, how often it occurred. It offered control over musical elements such as chords, key and tempo, while also allowing the user to select the 'Style' of a song. There were even special settings for Sound Canvas modules.
#Pg music band in a box plus
So what made it - and has continued to make it - so appealing? Simple: it bridged the gap for gigging and home musicians who needed decent accompaniments but didn't have the necessary skills to create them.īy version 5, BIAB could offer piano, bass, guitar, string and drum parts, plus support for GM and Roland's GS standard. The Melodist may appear complicated, but a complete song can be generated by a swift click on the 'OK' button.īIAB has certainly been around for a long time (it was last reviewed in SOS October 1992) and is clearly still being developed. Version six was released some time later and then BIAB seemed to disappear - quite odd, when you consider that around 150 new features and improvements have been added in the course of its last two versions. The former added System 7 compatibility and improvements to the Style creator, while the latter incorporated more instruments, the all‑important General MIDI support, and support for a single melody line, making BIAB not dissimilar to a basic sequencer.
#Pg music band in a box mac
On moving to the Mac platform I tracked BIAB through versions four and five. It offered three‑part accompaniment, the facility to enter lyrics, a print‑out capability and MIDI File compatibility, along with incredible ease of use. Way back in August 1991, I concluded that the original Atari ST version of the Band‑In‑A‑Box auto‑accompaniment program was "cheaper than almost any ST sequencer but with facilities belying the price" in a review appearing in the now‑defunct ST Format.
![pg music band in a box pg music band in a box](https://plugintorrent.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/6fec70f6901ba4cec5a0f4d0eb618d14.jpg)
These days, it's very much at home in the latest Mac‑ and PC‑based studios, as Vic Lennard and Martin Walker discover.
#Pg music band in a box software
Style‑generation software Band‑In‑A‑Box is one of many still‑thriving music programs that started life on the Atari.