Technical information

Chapter 12: Tutors and Wizards
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1. Entering your Vocal Range.
Here you enter your “comfortable” vocal range, from lowest note to highest note. If you can sing falsetto,
you can also enter the highest falsetto note, and the % of falsetto notes that would be acceptable as falsetto
notes.
You can also select a preset (like Baritone Male or Contralto Female). Or you can select one of 8 “User
Preset slots” to enter and save a custom range (if you press the [Save & Name User Preset] button)
2. Selecting the keys that would be “allowable.”
Most musicians have favorite keys, so this area allows selection of keys that would be acceptable for the
Vocal Wizard to choose. For example, if we choose “Jazz” keys, we’ll see that the Vocal Wizard now
recommends the key of C instead of D.
3. Setting the range of the song to analyze (usually the whole song).
Normally you’d want to analyze the whole song, but this allows you to select a partial range.
4. Selecting the track to analyze. You’d usually pick the Melody track, but can also choose the Soloist track.
You can then analyze the Melody by pressing the [Analyze] button. Most functions
automatically re-analyze the song, but pressing the [Analyze] button forces a re-
analysis of the song. This displays the analysis of the song.
1. A purple area describes the current range of the song, low note to high note, and compares it to your vocal range.
2. The radio buttons show each of the 12 semitone keys, and show a score for each key. The lowest score is the
best. Keys are also colored – green (best key), yellow (good key), and grey (bad key for the song).