An entire band could conceivably use it to construct complex songs pulling from a range of disciplines. And while Guitar Pro is built around the needs of guitarists, it works equally as well with a wide range of instruments. Professional musicians can make use of its extensive features to mess around with melodies and harmonies, turn a jam session into a functional piece of sheet music, or experiment with new sounds by downloading tablature from online. Overall Opinion: Whether you learned guitar by hand and you're trying to perfect the method of writing sheet music or you're a novice just figuring out the basics of performance and looking to improve your skills, Guitar Pro is a great tool. but yeah, MP being tab-oriented is not for me.Ĭons: It is tab oriented - it's hard to edit a music piece.Ĭannot move notes up/down with a simple mouse drag Then the weirdness of adding a bar, does not add where the cursor is: it ALWAYS add that bar before so, you have to start editing your work and immediately add a few dozens bars. if you have a piece of music sheet you want to enter on GP, then you have to kinda convert it into a tab, either previously on a piece of paper or on the fly when you are editing the piece. I started reading the manual then it dawned on me when I saw a mention of that GuitarPro is TAB-Oriented so. took a good couple of hours scouring the internet and no mention of this such "basic operation". In starting using the app, it felt quite straightforward to setup the signature and all but then, first drawback: I could not move the notes on either staff or tab. Overall Opinion: In search of a good notation software, I looked for alternatives to MuseScore and the first recommendation was GuitarPro but unfortunately, the expectation fell short.
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