To load a song from a file, click the
menu in the upper-left corner of the page.
Then click the Open Song menu item.
To rewind, play, or stop the song, press one of the
buttons above.
To turn the metronome on or off, click on its image
above.
To create a song, select New Song from the File.
Initially, every song file is created with one MIDI Instrument track.
To record that track, press the
button above.
To record Audio from your computer's microphone instead of MIDI from your synthesizer, see the
Audio Tracks section
below.
To erase, rewind, and re-record a track, press the
button above.
If you would prefer to control Anvil Studio's Record/Play/Stop functions
remotely from your external MIDI keyboard,
select Options from the View menu.
To create a new track, choose Create from the Track menu above.
Your song will then contain multiple tracks, that are all played together when you play the song.
When you create a new track, you need to decide what kind of track to create.
If you create an Instrument track, the track contains MIDI events that can be recorded
from a synthesizer keyboard connected to your computer.
If you create a Rhythm track, the track contains MIDI events for Drums and other rhythm instruments, as well as Audio Samples.
If you create an Audio track, the track contains audio that can be recorded with a microphone.
Many actions on this and other pages only affect the active track.
The active track is the one whose name is highlighted in the track list above.
To make another track active, select it by clicking on its name or number on this page.
To change a track's name, either click in the Track Name field, or click the Comments page.
To erase or delete a track, select the track and then choose Erase Track or Delete Track from the Track menu above.
To edit the contents of a track, select the track that you want to edit by clicking on its name or number above, then
click the Compose button, or select Composer from the View menu.
To see a symbolic list of the active track's MIDI events,
select Event List from the View menu.
To edit comments that you want to associate with the active track,
select Comments from the View menu.
Initially, the songs current position is displayed in the time field
in SMPTE format (Minutes:Seconds:Frames).
If you would prefer to see time displayed in Measures:Beats:MidiTicks format, click the time
field with the mouse.
To move to a different position in the song, drag the position scroll bar
in the upper-left corner.
To remember the song's current position with a new Cue Point, push the New button above the Cue Point list:
You can quickly return to the same position later by selecting the desired Cue Point from the Cue Point list.
You can change the MIDI and Audio hardware that Anvil Studio uses to record and play songs by clicking the
button. This is really a short-cut to the Synthesizers page.
Then, to quickly return to this page, click the Back menu item
at the top of the screen.
You can edit the active track's synthesizer's properties by clicking the
button.
You can experiment with a song by changing any of the following track properties while a song is stopped, or playing.
To change which synthesizer you want to play an Instrument track, click the track's Device column.
To add more synthesizer's to this list,
select Synthesizers from the View menu.
To change which instrument the synthesizer should use to play a track, click the track's Instrument column.
To temporarily disable a single track during playback, click the Track's On column with the left mouse button.
To temporarily make a track the SOLO track, or the only track played, click the Track's On column with the right mouse button.
To control a track's Pan (similar to Stereo balance), or volume,
click on those columns for the track you want to change.
To adjust the width of any of a track-property column, drag the edge of the column right or left while holding the left mouse button.
To change the song's tempo, or to adjust the tempo or sound of the metronome, select Metronome from the View menu.
If the metronome is turned on when you record a track, a three-count lead-in will be displayed before recording begins.
To copy or paste measures from one track to another, select the track's measures
in the right-most column, and then choose an item from the Edit menu.
Select Paste Over if you want the clipboard to replace sound on the current track.
Select Paste Mix if you want the clipboard to be mixed with the current track.
For audio tracks, Paste Mix reduces the volume, preventing the possibility of distortion.
If you want to preserve the volume, and accept the possibility of distortion, hold the Shift key while selecting the Paste Mix menu item.
To edit individual notes or samples, press the Compose button or select Composer from the View menu.
To record Audio from your computer's microphone instead of MIDI from your synthesizer,
click on Instrument in the active track's Type column to change the track-type
from Instrument to Audio.
Click the Audio Quality field to change quality and memory requirements of your recording.
One Mono track consumes memory at the following rates:
Quality |
Bytes per second |
Bytes per minute |
Sample |
CD |
88,200 |
5.2 million |
16 bit @ 44 kHz |
Video Game |
44,100 |
2.6 million |
8 bit @ 44 kHz |
Phonograph |
44,100 |
2.6 million |
16 bit @ 22 kHz |
FM Radio |
22,050 |
1.3 million |
16 bit @ 11 kHz |
Radio |
22,050 |
1.3 million |
8 bit @ 22 kHz |
Phone |
11,025 |
661,500 |
8 bit @ 11 kHz |
Old Radio |
8,000 |
480,000 |
8 bit @ 8 kHz |
Stereo tracks consume memory twice as fast as Mono tracks.
To change which device Audio will be played on, click the Audio Out
field and select a device from the list.
To change which device an Audio track will be recorded from, click the track's Device or Channel column.
To switch that device's audio source between Mic/Line, Audio CD, etc.,
click the
to the right of the
Duration: field.
This brings up the Volume Control window.
Select Properties from the Volume Control window's Options menu.
Select the sound card you want to use in the field named Mixer device:.
Click the o Recording button and check all boxes in the field named
Show the following volume controls:
Press the OK button.
This causes the window's title to change from Volume Control to
Recording Control.
Examine the various volume controls in the Recording Control window.
Make sure the Select box is checked for the audio source that you want.
Then adjust that source's Volume and Balance.
To test microphone levels before recording an Audio track, return to the Mixer page and press the VU button.
A VU meter will appear in the track's Instrument column, showing the microphone's peak volume.
If the VU meter goes into the red zone, you should turn the microphone's pre-amp down unless
you want to record a distorted sound.
Pressing the VU button before the REC button can also be used to warm up
the sound card, which eliminates the popping sound that some sound cards introduce when they start to record.
Normally, audio tracks are mixed as needed when the Record or Play button
is pressed. Pressing the Pre-Mix button pre-mixes all enabled Audio tracks
so that the Record or Play button will respond immediately.
When all Audio tracks have already been mixed, the Mix button is disabled (grey).
If you make a mistake while recording Audio, you can Punch In, or re-record
over just the mistake, as follows.
Position the song immediately before the mistake.
Press the Pre-Mix button so that there will be no delay when the
button is pressed.
Press the VU button so the Sound Card is warmed up.
Press the
button.
Press the Stop button when done re-recording over the mistake.
For more precise control over Punch In, see the directions on the Compose page.
To add a non-destructive Delay or Echo effect to an Audio track,
click the Delay column for the track you want to change.
If your song has Audio tracks, you can use DirectX audio Effects Processor pluggins
provided by any software vendor. Press the fx button
to select which effects you want to use in this song, or to adjust
their properties. To install DirectX Effects Processors, go to your favorite
shareware site and search for DirectX.
To cause one audio track to play later than the other tracks, change its Time Shift column.
If you notice that audio tracks are not played back in sync with Instrument or Rhythm tracks, please
select MIDI / Audio device latency from the View menu, press that window's
Help button, and follow its directions.
The free version of Anvil Studio limits you to a single audio track, that
can last no longer than 1 minute.
The optional Multi-Audio 1/8 accessory allows you to
create songs with up to 8 audio tracks.
If your computer has at least 32 meg of RAM, each track can be up to 60 minutes long, limited only by the amount of free disk space
on your computer.
This accessory also allows you to create up to
10 sampled audio sounds on a rhythm track
where the free version of Anvil Studio only supports
rhythm tracks up to two sampled sounds per song.
The optional Multi-Audio 4/8 accessory allows you to simultaneously record up to 4
audio tracks. When that accessory is installed,
you can enable recording on multiple tracks by pressing the Shift key while clicking on each track to be recorded.
All tracks with Green dots at their left will be recorded when the record button is pressed.
Please select Catalog from the Help menu
for information about ordering accessories.
If you have trouble with recording or playing back songs, please select
How do I... or Common Problems from the Help menu for more specific information.