This in turn as made me faster, more accurate with better strength. GP has allowed me to put into practice the things I’m working on, like riffs and lead lines rather than chords and strumming, and in the songs I like. The number of completely infuriating issues with this program is absolutely. ![]() THis will not work even if you save to the most recent tg file. For example, if you double clicked on the tab file, the TuxGuitar will open but will only show you a untitled.tg file. In the past, I found that there wasn’t really a link between my practice and playing songs. Very buggy in this version and the last few version that I have used for years. Point is though, being able to vary the speed and target sections of music has hugely improved my playing. I’ve just now spent literally an hour non stop on a Darkest Hour riff - with it on loop and building it up from 40%, and by the end I was at 90%. In GP the functionality to loop sections, combined with the ability to slow it down means I can isolate passages and work on them. ![]() Then it’s just a case of importing into GP, and you can build up a library of tabs. As adi says, you can use UG to download tabs without a subscription - user created tabs are free and you can always find one that’s good quality, even to some less mainstream stuff (I’m playing a lot of metal). I can honestly say that other than Justin’s lessons, it’s probably brought me on as a player more than anything else. ![]() I went with adi_mrok’s advice (thanks again mate!) and bought Guitar Pro it is exactly what I was after in my initial query. I’ve not been on the forum in a while and I saw this topic had a few more responses so thought I’d update in case it helps anyone - ironically pretty much a year after opening the thread
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