Guitar Pro 7 Slide

Guitar Pro 7 Slide

In this article, we put your knowledge of the software to the test by sharing 14 little-known tips on your favorite tablature editor.

To save your customized Stylesheet, you just need to apply your settings and then click on the “Options” menu, then select “Save Style…”.

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To use your Stylesheet every time you use Guitar Pro, go to the preferences menu. (Guitar Pro 7 > Preferences > General > DOCUMENTS> Force stylesheet) to apply your customized Stylesheet.

Astuces Guitar Pro 7 à Connaître Absolument

If you are composing and if you don’t know anything about music theory, you can display the guitar neck on any instrument other than a guitar to compose using the tablature notation

If the first number is lower than the second, beats are missing. If you see for instance: 3.0:4.0 it means that one beat is missing in your bar to complete your 4/4 time signature.

And if the first number is higher than the second, your bar has too many notes in it. You’ll have to remove notes or reduce their durations.

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To add a capo to your track, you can go to the right panel called “Inspector”, select “TRACK” then click on the cogwheel next to “Tuning”.

To add a repeat sign, just click on the icon (“Repeat Open”) situated on the left panel, it’s made of 2 bars and 2 dots. Click on the first beat of a bar and click on this icon to add the repeat sign. You can then choose the number of times you want it to repeat itself.

The multivoice feature is quite unknown by Guitar Pro 7 users. But it can very useful if you need to edit several melodic voices with different rhythms.

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You have probably already noticed all the different types of slides available in the Edition Palette. But do you know the differences between them?

Select the bars you want to loop, click on the loop icon and next lick on the percentage button next to the LCD screen to activate the feature.

The audio export is a wonderful tool for creating backing tracks. To use it you can go to: File > Export > Audio…

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If you use Guitar Pro very often, I advise you to take a look at the preferences to set the options to your use: Guitar Pro menu > Preferences.

Keyboard shortcuts are really useful to know, especially if you use Guitar Pro very often. They can save you a lot of time when playing or editing scores.

I hope that this list of tips has taught you more about Guitar Pro and will help you in your daily use.

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What about you? Do you have hidden options or other tips to share with us? Feel free to share them in the comments for the benefit of other users!

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Guitarist and creator of back2guitar.com, Adrien is passionate about guitar pedagogy and an enthusiast Guitar Pro user since 2003. (GP4). On his site, he shares guitar lessons for beginners as well as guitar gear buying guides.almost ten years ago. I’ve used it to make hundreds of tabs. So I was giddy with excitement with last week’s release of Guitar Pro 7 (I’m a Guitar Pro affiliate in case that changes your opinion on my review).

If you’re starting fresh and wondering whether to buy Guitar Pro 7 I’d highly recommend it. It’s more powerful, widely-used and user-friendly than free apps like TuxGuitar and the long dormant Power Tab (although an alpha of Power Tab 2.0 has popped up recently). And at €75 (about $80) it’s way more affordable than the eye-wateringly expensive general scoring apps like Finale and Sibelius. If you’re going to be tabbing regularly it’s well downloading the trial and giving it a go. It’s a no-brainer.

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If you’re considering upgrading from Guitar Pro 6 it’s more of mixed bag at the moment. The improvements are more than enough that I’ve already forked out €30 for the upgrade. But there are downsides to the transition and I wouldn’t blame anyone for sticking with Guitar Pro 6 until the kinks have been worked out and a few options added back in.

It’s been 7 years since Guitar Pro 6 (GP6) was released and it was starting to show its age. And the rise of HD/retina displays has been as kind to GP6 as it was to ageing actors. Guitar Pro 7 (GP7) is an overdue improvement. It’s now clean, crisp and easy on the eye.

The layout has seen a similar improvement. GP7 switches to retractable panels. So there are more options under your fingertips and once you’ve got a score set up you can quickly hide at least two of the panels away while you get on with tabbing. Thumbs up from me.

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Guitar Pro 6’s PNG image export left a fair bit to be desired. The image quality was low and the background was grey (which actually worked out nicely for me on the blog). For higher quality images I had to export a PDF then convert that to PNG. GP7’s PNG export is much better. Although still not as good as exporting a PDF.

GP7 adds the ability to export MP3 audio files. GP6 could only export WAV audio files. I don’t often export audio files form Guitar Pro but every time I’ve exported a WAV I’ve converted it to MP3. Now GP7 will export MP3s saving the hassle.

Guitar

Both GP6 and GP7 allow you to import MIDI files and will attempt to turn them into standard notation/tab. But GP7 does a massively better job at it.

Improvements To Slides In Tablature

GP7 has included the key signature, got rid of the useless rests and correctly picked up on the triplets (importing triplets is an option in the GP7 but not in GP6). The GP7 import is much neater and more readable. It will also now import lyrics (I’m going to be generous and blame the midi file for that being in the bass clef) and you can select which tracks from the MIDI you import.

Sounds: When playing back a tab Guitar Pro uses its “Realistic Sound Engine”. It’s certainly more pleasant than MIDI playback. GP7 adds a bunch of new sounds. Ukulele-wise, it’s gone from one sound to three: ukulele, natural and picked. They’ve made sound improvements a tentpole feature of GP7 so someone must really care. But I’ve been fine with the sound in GP6 and the improvements in GP7 are wasted on me.

Polyphonic Tuner: A polyphonic tuner will check the tuning of all your strings at once. You just strum all the strings into your computer mic and it’ll tell which are at of tune. I was fully expecting it not to work and be thrown off by the re-entrant string. But it worked perfectly. I don’t know if I’ll actually use it much but it gave me a, “Holy shit I am living in the future, ” moment.

Famous & Easy Slide Guitar Songs

Track Defaults: GP6 didn’t let you change the default settings for new tracks. Now you can save a default notation types (standard, tab or slash), tuning, name and sound for each instrument.

New Preferences: In GP6 pressing the + key makes a note shorter and – made it longer. Which is something my brain never got to grips with. Now there’s an option to switch it to the obviously correct way around.

GP7 drops previous version’s support for Linux. Not a big deal for me or most Guitar Pro users. But this is certainly going to make GP7 a no-go for some people.

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The Open E Tuning For Slide Guitar

Once again the Guitar Pro file format has changed (now to .gp). That means files you create in Guitar Pro 7 can’t be opened in previous versions.

It is possible to export to .gpx (which opens in GP6) but the option to export to .gp5 is gone. Which is a shame because as well as being openable by GP5 and GP6 other tabbing software is able to import it. That just leaves MusicXML as a way to transfer between tab software.

Add the bass note to the chord’s name when it’s not the root note: When automatically naming a chord Guitar Pro will give them slash chord names if the root is different from the lowest note of the chord. Great for guitar chords but awful for ukulele chords. GP6 allowed you to turn this off but GP7 doesn’t seem to.

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Backup every _ actions: GP6 had an option automatically backup your file after a number of actions of your choosing. Which saved my arse a few times. As far as I can tell GP7 is manual saves only.

The big issue I’ve had is while using bluetooth headphones. That causes GP7 crashes every time I try to play a score and makes all audio from the computer sound like complete garbage in the meantime. It might be particular to my setup.

Virtual Instrument Scales The ukulele scales in the virtual instrument (a fretboard popup that shows notes and scales) are all kinds of jacked-up. I didn’t find one that was correct. Here’s what it thinks C major looks like:

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If you look at the bottom of that screenshot it has the right notes for the scale. But something is going very wrong in translation to the

Guitar

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