Also, I would not automatically assume that any guitar player can play bass well. Buying a bass is another option, however, the poster said he didn't want more clutter so was looking for software options. The poster"s original question was whether he could get realistic sounds with MIDI and the answer is yes, that is one option. I have heard some songs done with EWQL Ministry of Rock, good stuff, and another viable option.
Some will even duplicate the part an octave lower, and you can mix that back in with your original. There are quite a few "low-end enhancers" that will add a lot of punch to your track.
WAV file and see if you can get it to sound the way you want with EQ, chorus and other effects. Trillian and Scarbee are great programs, but they take time to master.Īnother option is to render the file as a. You might spend a lot of time tweaking your MIDI file or re-recording the part. Those programs have different velocity sensitivities or other differences that make your well-crafted MIDI track sound less-than-great with them. But that doesn't mean that a Trillian or Scarbee bass will sound good with that track. If you export it as a Standard MIDI file, you should get everything you see in the MIDI track in Guitar Pro. If you export it as MIDI, where is it going? What program are you importing that into so you can use it with Trillian or Scarbee? If I export it as MIDI, does it save all the articulations and could a program like Trillian or Scarbee read that? (I was really impressed with the videos I saw for Scarbee)
#TRILIAN BASS METAL HOW TO#
But it just doesn't sound good enough, and I'm not sure how to make it sound better and more realistic. But what I would really like to do is to just use the bass track from Guitar Pro, since I'm writing all my music into it anyway so it's already done.