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Tabledit banjo rebecca5/16/2023 ![]() ![]() I always get my guitar and bass parts in first, then go and add the melody instruments. Once I get a measure tabbed out for a particular chord, I can copy/paste it everywhere I want that chord. I just put in the bouncy rhythm, using brush strokes on the upbeats (highlight the chord notes and hit "B" to make it a brush stroke). Guitar chords are easy to add if you know how to play the guitar. I just add new modules as needed, change the instrument sound and tuning, then add each part. I will usually do a 5- or 6-part tune including mandolin/fiddle, banjo, guitar, bass, and often mandola as well. Sherry, I use TablEdit for backup tracks all the time. don't know how, yet.Įdited by - F Elisha Eastes Jr on 04:58:47 Maybe you mean chord diagrams above the tab.? I'm pretty sure all that's there. Oops, I may have misunderstood your question. A "poor man's" backing track I suppose? You could also apply the guitar sound to the playback. It would not emulate a guitar but it would give full chords over a measured duration and meter. ![]() Sherry, the few times I played around with the program to seemed to me that the way to accomplish what you're wanting is to stack the notes in TablEdit so they strike all at once, and then make them whole, or half notes. Bit it's gonna be what I use for the next few years. It'll take me some time to sift through years of work and move everything over to it. It's kind of getting me excited about buying TablEdit. Wow, yes, I see I could sink my teeth into this topic.
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