![]() You generate the tabs by drawing over the notes on the spectrogram (you can see that in the image below). And at the bottom is where the tabs appear. Below that are the chords Capo thinks are played at that point in the song. ![]() This shows the pitches of all the notes Capo picks up in the track. Then in the middle you have the spectrogram. When you open a file (WAV, AIFF, MP3, MP4 or M4A) Capo 3 will present you with something like this (I’m using James Hill’s legendary Uke Talk for these examples):Īt the top you’ve got the track itself. What It DoesĬapo helps you to transcribe tabs and chords of a song from an audio file. If you want to try out the Mac version, you can find a free trial here. This review is for the macOS version of the app. So I’ve finally gathered my thoughts on it and am ready to review it. ![]() I’ve used Capo since version 2 and have been using Capo 3 for four years now. One tool I reach for is Capo 3 from SuperMegaUltraGroovy. You’d think after all these years I’d have got good at it. ![]() Learning songs by ear and tabbing them out is hard work.
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