After much delay, PG Music released Band in a Box 2015 for Mac last week. Here are some of the new features:.

  1. Band-in-a-box 2012 For Mac Mac

Audio Recording. Saving a song to video and upload it to YouTube.

Read/Write Support for Apple Loops There were also some enhancements to the GUI, but if you were expecting a more Mac like overhaul, you are going to be sadly disappointed. When they say GUI enhancements, they mean that when you have a track that has a banjo, it shows you where the banjo is rather than lumping it in the string section. Useful, but it should have had this a while ago.

Not sure how useful the saving a song to youtube is going to be. They also have a save to soundcloud feature but I’ve never used that. Another great thing they finally added was that it can now check for updates on it’s own.

Not that they need to push out updates to this rock solid piece of software. Still, it is a welcome addition. Is it worth buying this update? The real tracks alone are worth it. Love the new real tracks, and wish there were like a 100 of them in each style rather than 33 or 36.

This is still probably the best piece of software a musician can own. PG Music has released the latest greatest version of Band in a Box for Macintosh. This is one of my favorite programs, hands down. Here are some of the I like:. 31 More Jazz RealTracks, 35 Rock-Pop RealTracks.

New Song Form feature. Remembers recent RealTracks that you selected.

Easy Buttons for Transposing (Display only) to Eb, Bb and other clefs/instruments. Woodshed Tempo button They also have some “SuperMidi” things, to make the midi tracks sound better. The main feature for me in this update was the Woodshed Tempo button. Now, Band in a Box has HAD this function for a while, buried in the preferences somewhere. I believe during the 2012.5 Beta test I suggested it would be a good idea to put it in a button and move it out front. PG Music did just that.

The Woodshed button works by you giving it a start tempo, say 120, and then tell it how fast to get to (say 240) and in what increments. It’s very very nice to have. I’m hoping that they add the ability to have the Woodshed stuff be able to be dumped into an audio file at some point. They seemed interested when I made that suggestion. I think it would be VERY useful for making practice for students and stuff. Some of the new Real Tracks are amazing, and at least one (Euro Dance) is crap. PG Music STILL hasn’t fixed/added a feature I think is essential, the ability to have the Open by Title be able to traverse subdirectories.

It is a great feature, Open by Title, that shows the song name, key, tempo, and style for all the files in that directory. BUT if you have a subdirectory, it doesn’t open and do those files. That is stupid. It is easy to have upwards for 5,000 band in a box files (I have something like 12,000) if you download all the free fake book changes and what not freely available on the internet.

Does PG Music want us to store everything in ONE directory? I still rate Band in a Box is an ESSENTIAL tool for anyone learning Jazz. Or learning music. Or composing. The ability to pick a key, type a chord progression, pick a tempo, and then a style and go is amazing. And the Real Tracks add to the program. Anyone buying this program needs to pony up for the Real Tracks, or at least the Real Tracks they would be using.

Once you start using them, the Midi Stuff is just so 1990s. Seems Samsung is not the only company that copies others. PGMusic’s is clearly the target of ‘s photocopier. BandMaster is $29 accompaniment software solution for Mac. No idea how it sounds (no videos or audio available), but it does have some minor interface improvements compared to Band in a Box (i.e.: Time Line). With no audio or video, I’d be a little concerned about how this program is going to sound. Band in a Box is STILL the leader in the sort of program, and still my hands down “GET IT” choice.

This week has been amazing. First, on Wednesday, we had. On Friday, PG Music unleashed. I shudder to think what next week will bring (other than actually receiving an iPhone 5 on Friday!). Like the iPhone 5, is more tweaking of an already great product.

I still am surprised that more musicians do not know of this amazing piece of software. Or maybe still dismiss it as this midi tool (which it was back in the 90s) that uses Quicktime to generate cheesy backgrounds. It is not that. These people also probably still believe we didn’t go to the moon.

Band in a Box, if you read this site, I always rave about. For anyone learning jazz, or just music in general, it is an invaluable tool. You simply type in a chord progression, tempo, key (if you want), and then pick a style. There are sooo many styles. There are quite a few midi only tracks that, depending on your setup, can sound very very good. But the program has really shines in it’s use of “RealTracks”.

The software pretty much seemlessly takes real performances and will piece them into the song. So, if you wanted your masterpiece in the key of Db in the style of a Pop song with Electric keyboard, fretless bass, drums, and a Smooth sax soloing.it can do this. And it sounds damn good. Every version of the program, like every revision of the iPhone, tweaks and improves upon what they had before.

New things in this version of Band in a Box:. new chord types, including the diminished triad (Cdim5 has notes C, Eb, Gb), the “add2” chord (Cadd2 = C, D, E, G) and “madd2” (Finally diminished triads!) There were some other tweaks to the program to. There is a simplified saving to M4A or AIFF from the File Menu (though I did want this to be a pop up dialog in the beta test so you could easily select say a DropBox folder to save them to rather than the program just dumping it into folder where the source file exists. Last beta still did it that way:-. The program does load a little faster than the 2012 as well. There are still some annoyances. I swear every beta test I am involved with, I complain about the “Open Song By Title” thing, which will display the song title, file name, if it has a melody, and the style.

Except the Windows version will traverse folders in that folder (nested folders), and the Mac version just does the files in the folder. So the 10,000+ Band in a Box files I have would have to be all in ONE folder instead of sort of organized into subfolders.

Another annoyance, or rather, something they need to bring to the fore in the program is the “Woodshed Tempo” thing. It is buried in Preferences 2 in the program. Basically, what it does is that every time you end a loop of a song, say you get done with the 5 choruses of Giant Steps at 160, it will bump up the next loop of the song by a certain number of beats per minute. So you can practice changes to a song, and start it at say 140, and have it bump up every loop by 10 clicks every time.

Amazing for practicing. I keep lobbying for them to make a button for this, or at least make it so it’s not buried in the program. It’s a great tool to use.and few seem to know it’s there. So, the verdict.

Of course it is a BUY. If you are learning music, and specifically, Jazz (or soloing), you need this tool. And you need to splurge and get ALL the real tracks (or AT LEAST the styles you like). The BEST version to get is the Hard Drive version, which PG Music will send you a hard drive that has lots of extra space, and the program and all the styles and real tracks.

Band-in-a-box 2012 For Mac Mac

And it’s portable, so you can take it between home and the studio, or use it on another computer. The program takes something like 65 gigs to install. Yes, it is expensive to get the whole thing. But like any good tool, it is an investment. And PG Music’s upgrades are very reasonable (usually the upgrades to all the new real tracks and stuff is $129).

Get this program. Or put it on your Christmas list. I recently reviewed version 2011.5 of Band in a Box.

Partly because I had to upgrade in order to participate in the Beta for 2012. Now that, lets look at what it offers and what issues it still has to fix. Off the bat, you get more. That alone is worth it. More Mike LeDonne Organ, Fusion, Jazz Funk styles are included in the update. That alone is worth the $99 upgrade. A few versions ago, PG Music added a DAW feature where you could generate and drag Midi or Audio tracks to your favorite DAW (Logic, Garageband, ProTools, etc).

This version, they added the reverse. You can now import Loops (audio or midi) INTO Band in a Box. It sorta works, and I imagine in future versions it will work better. They worked out some sort of arrangement with AmpliTube to bundle it with Band in a Box. So now you can tweak the guitar sounds coming out of a real track. Various other fixes as well such as the “Same but Different” when generating a track so it doesn’t always play the same thing.

Seems more natural now. Nothing OMG is introduced in this version other than maybe the ability to add loops into Band in a Box. Bugs and problems and other things I’ve participated several times in the Betas Band in a Box. There are TWO long standing issues that I keep mentioning. The first is Open Song by Title. On the windows version, this will show you a great view of all the songs in a Band in a Box folder including if it has a melody, and what style it is using. It also parses through subfolders.

On the Mac version, it doesn’t parse through the subfolders. Which is stupid since there are thousands of free band in a box files out there, and putting them all into ONE folder seems stupid. Second, there is a saving bug that if a song has a long filename, when you Save As you get BOSORNB demo (140bp#AD7428.SGU Also, there are various little things like not being able to size windows at all, such as the Open Song by Title window. This is probably due to it being a cross platform program and having more roots in the Windows side than the Mac side (though I think the program started on the Atari ST, cause I remember a version when I was a kid that ran on my Atari ST).

Preferences in Band in a Box are a nightmare. I’d suggest doing preferences sorta like how Finale does preferences (another program that is cross platform). No full screen for Lion though it runs just fine on Lion (2011 and 2011.5 version did as well). Some windows resize, but a lot don’t.

That needs to be fixed to make the program more Mac like. There is NO WAY to customize the buttons in the program.

So you can’t get rid of things you don’t need that are cluttering the display, like the Vid.Help button, or the things that are redundant like having a PGMusic button (which takes you to their website but that is also in the Help menu). It would be nice to be able to get rid of some of the excess buttons if you don’t need them just to un-clutter the interface, especially if you have a MacBook Air (not that I do) and a small screen. AND there is this great feature in the program called Woodshedding, which is buried in Preferences 2 menu. This feature will include the speed of a song by a certain number up to a certain number. So you could have say 8 bars of a solo you want to shed.

Band in a box

You start it at 120, and tell it to increment every loop by 5 up to 220. BUT THERE IS NO BUTTON FOR THIS. That’s a rap So, is this still a program you should spend? If you are going to study jazz, this is a program you should have. If anything, it will play for itself by you NOT having to buy Aebersold play-alongs. You could simply buy a “Real Book” and Band in a Box and save a lot of money and gain the ability to practice Impressions for 40 choruses in a Funk style.or Bluegrass.or Gypsy Jazz style.or 12/8 Rock style.and in any key you want at any tempo.

The Real Tracks are very convincing, and even the Midi generated tracks can sound great if you put them into something like Garageband. Yes, this is something you should get. Great company and people making a program that simply does stuff nothing else does. 11 out of 10. So, it seems I never spoke about the latest and greatest from up north. As in Canada.

As in The Wizards of the North released back in the fall an update to that tighten things up and brought some fixes for the newer OS X systems. Hopefully you already know about Band in a Box. I’d rank it an essential piece of software. Sort of like owning a good horn, music stand, and metronome. Lately, the.5 releases of the program don’t add a lot of features but do add a bunch of new styles. Notable include:. improved waltzes (which were good with one chord per bar, but sucked with 2 chords).

Pedal Bass (Finally!) The real value of the $129 upgrade though are the. 70’s soul, Groovin’ Jazz Funk, Gypsy Jazz Latin, Jazz Guitar with Oliver Gannon and the awesome Mike LeDonne Organ styles are work the price alone. You also get some other styles (Country.not sure I’d ever use those) as well. Gripes about the program? My long standing issue that the Open By Song Title only finds things at in the root of the folder and does not traverse the folders in the folder. I don’t know if they will ever fix that. Which sucks cause over the years I’ve collected maybe 13,000 band in a box files, and its a pain to find stuff.

The Windows version, at least the version I last had on Windows, which I think was 2006, doesn’t have this problem. It finds all files in folders up to like 12,000.

AND the interface desperately needs to be “modernized”. Modernized to what, not really sure, but if they made it look more like Garageband or Logicthat would be a start. Floating windows, etc. In all, this is still an awesome program. The ability to “type” in a chord progression and get a very realistic sounding accompaniment track in pretty much any style (or stylessince you can use multiple styles in a song) with however many choruses in whatever key and tempo you chose.it’s the best practice tool or play tool I know of.

It is well worth the investment. I give it a 10 out of 10. Seems a friend of mine is going to be involved in a recording session (engineering) involving a pianist and PG Music. Will be interesting to get his view of how they record the stuff. Has updated their awesome program,. The main new features are:. More natural sounding real tracks over various tempos (ie: better pitch stretching and compressing technology).

Takes up less space (I haven’t been brave enough yet to try this on my install of Band in a Box yet). Multistyles and Change of individual RealTracks. So you can pick your favorite parts of RealTracks and put them all together or have the style change midstream. Scales Wizard which is great for students of Jazz The basic look and feel of the program is the same, which if you love it, then all is well in the universe, and if you think the circa 1991 look sucks then.well.it’s going to suck.

I think PG Music really needs to hire an interface specialist and completely overhaul the look of the program. Functionality wise, it is amazing. But a LOT of things could be better, like the Preferences area (please PG Music, look at like Digital Performer or even FINALE on how to clean up the Preferences), or just navigating the program in general. I know the program’s roots are from the Atari ST days, but the whole concept of GUI is different now, and PG Music still doesn’t seem to get it. Take for example the new Mixer.

While it is very nice to have a mixer, it is completely backwards. And there are 5 tabs to access the features, where a smart design could have put them all in ONE spot.

And left right for volume? The only program I use that has that is Garageband. A standard DAW type mixer where there are UP DOWN volume, knobs for panning and tone, a pop up level thing for reverb.

And it always wants to be the top window. DAWs like Digital Performer or even ProTools let you the mixer behind other windows. Things like this drive me mad.

I mentioned the whole mixer thing several times in the Beta test, and nothing happened.Sigh. Band in a Box is still a program without equal though. The complaints about interface quirks don’t tarnish the program. As a musician, you’d be foolish NOT to own this program with ALL the RealTracks. Once you hear it, and use it, you won’t be going back to your Aebersold play-alongs.

I give it a 9.5 out of 10. More features, smaller footprint for the RealTracks, generally faster than the previous version, more RealTracks, more options. All great additions to an already great program. 0.5 deducted for PG Music still not fixing strange things in the interface or just cleaning it up.

Though, this program still runs FINE on my 2006 iMac as well as my MacPro. PS, I HIGHLY recommend getting the Hard Drive versions.

Since downloading the program can take hours, and several 10s of gigabytes. A lot of ISPs are now capping your monthly allocation as well (Comcast, and now AT&T).

PLUS, getting it on a hard drive means you can RUN it from there or have it as a backup. Just released. Yes, several. Here are a few that I think are noteworthy:. Styles can now be made that are set to use Half-Time and Double-Time RealTracks. For example, you can make a Jazz Ballad style (tempo 65) that uses a Sax Soloist at tempo 140 (playing double time). For RealTracks, many Jazz comping styles now play triads (instead of 7ths) when simple triads are entered, instead of “jazzing them up” to 7ths chords (e.g.

Guitar: Freddie, Wes Piano: Some Jazz. All Stride, Rehearsal). If you prefer this “the old way”, where triads are automatically “jazzed up” when comping using Jazz RealTracks, then you can set the Prefs-Realtracks settings option to force 7ths for triads. Plus, you get a bunch more. One of the Paks comes with some B3, and other has some excellent Jazz Guitar. Is it worth the money?

Yes, I think so. It is a great tool for musicians who want to practice 50 choruses of soloing.at whatever speedin whatever stylein whatever key.

Mac

Or perhaps you’ve like to figure out some chords for a song you were working on? BinaB can help you there. Or maybe figure out what chords were played in a song? Yep, it can help you there too.

So many uses for this program.it should really be a REQUIREMENT for a Musician to own it. UPDATE: A few of the RealTrack Saxophone tracks are Eric Marienthal. How cool is that??? It has been really hard keeping the cat in the bag (I was a beta tester for the last 2 weeks or so), but tonight finally released. As was the case in the previous version, this version is Intel only.

So, you people with G5s or other PowerPC chipped computers.you are out of luck. Though the speed increases in this version (more on that in a sec) probably would have made Band in a Box 2010 tolerable for G5 Macintoshes. There are, and I’ll list the ones that I think are the best. “No more long waits for RealTracks to generate!

RealTracks generate much faster, 4X faster on average. A typical song with RealTracks that took 20 seconds to generate will generate now in about 5 seconds. And if you freeze some or all tracks in the song (see below), playback of RealTracks is almost instantaneous.” In Band in a Box 2009.5, generating Real Tracks took FOREVER. Even on a MacPro, it took a while. On an iMac.it could take nearly a minute in some cases. On my iMac from 2006 (a lowly 2 Gigahertz Core 2 Duo iMac), it was fast in generating real tracks. Most took maybe 5 seconds to do.

I think the longest (like 10 choruses with 4 real tracks and a real soloist) took maybe 10 seconds. But that was still totally fine. They are NOT kidding about the speed.

It is way faster. Useable fast. “Time for generation of MIDI arrangement is much faster – now ‘instantaneous (less than 1 second)!” Yup. Midi arrangements are nearly you press play and it goes. Even if you do 20 choruses with 5+ instruments. “There is now a “Plug-in” mode for your favorite sequencer (GarageBand, ProTools, Logic, Nuendo, Reaper and more). With the new plug-in mode, BB is open as a small always-on-top window, and acts as a plug-in for your favorite DAW/sequencer, so that you can Drag-n-Drop MIDI and audio (AIFF) tracks from BB to your favorite sequencer.

Work in your favorite sequencer, type a progression in Band-in-a-Box, and then simply drag the track from Band-in-a-Box to your sequencer’s track at the desired track and bar location.” This is actually really cool, though how it works is a little strange initially. You can, say, load up Garage Band, and say you have been working on a tune that is in 3/4 and is in the key of A and you need a guitar line. You can fire up Band in a Box, type in some chords, select a style or soloist or real track, or real soloist (or whatever they call it), and switch Band in a Box into DAW mode, tell it you want to generate AIFF or m4a audio tracks or Midi tracks, and drag the track right into Garageband. (I did leave out one step, but I feel ) 4.

“Freezing (locking) MIDI or Real tracks/RealDrums. Any track can now be frozen (MIDI or Real track). When frozen, it won’t get changed or re-generated. This saves time when replaying previous songs, and allows you to freeze an arrangement that you like. If you freeze the whole song, you don’t have to wait at all for the song to regenerate. Next time you play, it is ready to go.

(Note: this new freeze feature is different than the previous limited freeze feature that renders the whole arrangement to the audio track)” Kinda cool, but since it is so much faster overall in generating tracks I didn’t really use it much. Though if you FREEZE all the RealTracks, it plays back the song instantly. There are some other things like it will Normalize a rendered Audio file, Endings of songs work better, you can resize the window, things are saved with the song. All good stuff.

But the 4 listed above I think are the bread and butter. Ok, so, there are still some things that are in the Windows version of Band in a Box that are not present in the Macintosh version. Most notable is the Ear Training part (which is really nice). It doesn’t detract from the overall amazingness that this program has.

If you do music, you NEED to have this program on your computer. If you are a Jazz student, or someone who plays jazz, this program is something you need to have for working out that new chord progression at whatever tempo, for 30 choruses, in a Polka style. Upgrade price from Band in a Box 2009 is $159. First time purchasers $399. You get something like nearly 70 gigs of stuff. Amazing sounds.

Totally worth it. 10/10 (and I can’t remember the last time I gave something a 10 out of 10). Announced today that they are out with the latest, greatest version of (no new Mac version yet).

Nothing really “whoa” in this version, other than if you upgrade from the previous version you can get ALL the RealTracks. Some of the highlights of the update I found interesting are:. Plug-in mode.generate tracks and drag and drop them into your DAW like Sonar, FL-Studio, and ProTools. 3x faster generating RealTracks and freezing of tracks (so they don’t have to be generated again).finally!. RealTracks support Shots, Holds and Pushes.finally.

Double time/Half Time support for RealTracks. 999 undo levels Best deal for previous owners is the. You really don’t want to download it. I didit was painful. Band-in-a-Box is a great program, on any platform for people wanting to practice changes, songs, or even use it for composition.

I couldn’t count the times I’ve used BinaB generated drum and bass parts (and sometimes piano) for arrangements. Santa says go get it! After YEARS of waiting, and saying it was comingit is here.

I could hardly believe it myself. Yes, the languishing program that was 7 versions behind the Windows version (2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2007.5, 2008, 2009) has been brought back to life. I wondered what happened to Dr. Frankenstein.seems he was hired to bring the Mac version of BinaB to life again. I always thought it strange that PG Music made a HUGE effort to move Band in a Box to OS X with their version 12, but then promptly let it sit for years and years while the Windows version added more and more features.

It was mentioned years ago they were planning on a new version but.nothing ever materialized. Well, no more.

The 2009 version pretty much brings the up to the Windows version. First off, the program is HUGE if you want to download it, you better have a high speed connection.

A real FAST high speed connection. We are talking 20+ gigs of stuff to download if you purchased/upgraded the version with RealTracks (more on that in a minute). PG Music offers digital downloads in addition to physical media available on DVDs or an 80 gig hard drive (same price). As a previous owner of version 12 for the Mac, I opted for the “Everything PAK” and the 24 PAK upgrade that included some extra stuff. Ok, nowlets dive into the program, the features it has, what works, doesn’t work, and what is still missing in the Mac version that the Windows version has.

I could NOT believe my eyes this morning. After being behind 7 versions (2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2007.5, 2008, 2009), PG Music has LEAP FROGGED the Mac version to the latest Windows version. And to get it all up to date on a Mac is $159?!?!

I get ALL the features of the PC version? Even the “Direct-to-Disk” Audio Rendering? YES, you do Virginia.

So.one of the most valuable teaching/learning Jazz/music software programs is now fully available on the Mac. UPDATE: The download version is HUGE. Like, not quite as bad as downloading ProTools 8, but close. On first glance, it seems there are still things missing in the Mac version. There is no ear trainer (which is a cool feature), No Piano Roll window ( edit: oops, it is in there, just not out in the open), practice window and the Soundtrack thing.

These seem to be missing. Maybe in a maintenance version? UPDATE: Ok, it is WAY BIGGER THAN PROTOOLS 8 WAS. Seriously, I have downloaded 10 gigs so far, and I’m on RealTracks 11-12, which is 3.2 Gigs (downloading). I still have 10 more parts to downloadprobably another 20 gigs??

I just was given, to look at, some technology thing from some guy named Wilson, who is in charge of CMEA (California Music Educators Association) technology or something. Anyhow, it was about. It read like this guy had just found the Holy Grail. And, he had really BAD rendered backgrounds done off the Macintosh version of it. Like Nintendo type backgrounds.

First off, I don’t know if I should be amused or saddened by this. On the one hand, it is great that this guy has found Band in a box, but at the same time, it has been out since.the Atari ST. Which would be 1988 or so.

And CMEA is just now finding out about this? And they want tax payers to pay more money for the schools? Is a great program, but you should avoid the Macintosh version.

It is 5 versions behind at my last count. It lacks a ton of features that the PC version does.

If you want to run it on a Mac, get an, and do the thing or run it with. It works fine.

It is out, the latest version of. I took some guesses at what might be new in this version, and sadly, it looks like were put in. And that one was kind of a jest suggestion on my part. From RealTracks. With the previous release of Band-in-a-Box, we added RealDrums. Now we’ve added three additional “Real” instruments, including Real Pedal Steel, Real Acoustic Guitar, and Tenor Sax soloing (RealSax). These tracks replace the MIDI track for that instrument, and can be controlled just like the MIDI instrument (volume changes, muting etc.).

Best of all, they follow the chord progression that you have entered, so that you hear an authentic audio accompaniment to your song. These are not “samples,” but are full recordings, lasting from 1 to 8 bars at a time, playing along in perfect sync with the other Band-in-a-Box tracks. RealTracks can be built in to the style, and would replace either the bass, guitar, piano, or strings part, or they can be generated to the Soloist (or Melody) track using the Soloist feature. Band in a Box starts the process of leaving its roots, and becoming more like a really bad. In, you can graphically create songs, preview the loops you are going to use, and then put them together, graphically. Band in A Box (BinaB) is becoming the MS-DOS version of.

You type in the text you want, then it will generate the loops for you, rather than doing it graphically. I’m sure it all sounds good, real people playing beats midi usually. Recent Comments. Gregory Haller on. chives536 on. on.

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