Apple GarageBand Tutorial: Lesson 3 User Manual

Lesson 3: working with software instruments, What you'll need, Before you begin

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Lesson 3: Working with Software
Instruments

GarageBand includes an extensive set of Software Instruments, including drums, guitars, pianos,
organs, and synthesizers. You can play and record Software Instruments using the onscreen
music keyboard in GarageBand, or by connecting a MIDI-compatible music keyboard to your
computer. You can add effects to a Software Instrument, and edit Software Instrument regions in
the track editor.

What You'll Need

To work with Software Instruments, you can use the following:

The GarageBand onscreen music keyboard

A MIDI-compatible music keyboard (either a USB keyboard or a standard MIDI keyboard)

A USB cable (to connect a USB music keyboard) or pair of cables and a MIDI interface (to
connect a standard MIDI keyboard)

Before You Begin

To make it easier to follow the lesson as you work, print the lesson before you start.

In many of the tasks shown in this lesson you need to choose menu commands. In the lessons,
and in the GarageBand Help, menu commands appear like this:

Choose Edit > Join Selected.

The first term after

Choose

is the name of the menu in the GarageBand menu bar. The term (or

terms) following the angle bracket are the items you choose from that menu.

Using the GarageBand Onscreen Music Keyboard

You can use the GarageBand onscreen music keyboard to play and record Software Instruments.
When you show the onscreen music keyboard, by default it displays a four-octave range of keys.
You can resize the keyboard to display up to 10 octaves.

To show the onscreen music keyboard:

m

Choose Window > Keyboard.

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