The Project View

Once a project is loaded, you'll be greeted by the following screen. The Project View is divided into the Song Area, and the Heads-Up Display (or HUD, for short.)

Mac project view

The Song Area

This section of the Project View displays the "content" of the song. This is where you'll find the Waveform display, the Timeline, your Regions, and all the chords in the song.

You can think of this area as the place where you mark up the song with chords, regions, markers, etc.—whatever information helps you to learn and practice playing songs.

The amount of information that you add to a song in Capo is up to you. For some, it may be important to ensure that all the chords are correct down to the voicing they wish to play. For others, they may prefer to disable the chord display altogether and focus only on listening and placing markers at key locations in the song.

Song Views

Capo currently offers two different views of your Project—the Practice Song View, and the Tabbing Song View. Your choice of Song View controls what is displayed in the Song Area.

At the bottom-right of the window, located in the HUD you'll find the Song View Selector. Clicking on this control will pop up a menu that allows you to choose between the two views. You can also use the keystrokes shown in the menu to switch between views using your keyboard.

Practice

Practice Song View

The Practice Song View is focused primarily on playback. The song's waveform takes up the bulk of the window, and you may optionally display chords and tablature below it.

You may edit the chord entries while in this view, but not the tablature if it is displayed.

Tabbing

Tabbing Song View

The Tabbing Song View is where you'll transcribe the notes in your songs with the help of the spectrogram display. The waveform is still visible in this view, but it mostly serves to orient you to the song using its timeline display, and any regions or markers you have placed.

Changing The Display of Tablature and Chords

Mac help song settings

To change how chords and tablature are displayed, click the button at the left of the Song View Selector as shown above to reveal the Notation Settings:

Mac notation settings

Chords

Here you can choose to hide the chords completely, show just the Chord Names, display guitar Chord Boxes, or use Simple Piano keyboard diagrams.

Notes

Here you can choose to display Tablature at the very bottom of the Song Area—below the chords, if visible—or disable the notation completely.

Instrument

In addition to the (6-string) guitar, Capo can display chord boxes for bass (4-6 strings), mandolin, ukulele and banjo. When a different instrument is selected, Capo adjusts how the tablature is displayed in the In-Song View.

Tunings

Different tunings are available for each instrument available. By adjusting the tuning of your instrument, the chord shapes shown in the In-Song View will be adjusted accordingly.

As well, this setting will change the way that the tablature is displayed, if enabled.

Capo

One of Capo's most useful features for guitarists is the ability to specify a capo position.

Once you choose a fret for the capo, Capo will adjust the chords such that they are displayed in relation to the position you selected. For instance, if the song is calling for a G chord, and you set the capo to the 3rd fret, you would play an open E chord to sound a G. Capo will display an E chord with an open E shape as a result.

Similarly, when you are viewing tablature, the notation takes your capo setting into account, displaying frets in relation to the capo's position.

Left-Handed Chords

When Chord Boxes are being shown, this setting toggles whether Capo draws its chords flipped for left-handed players. Rock on, southpaws!

The Heads-Up Display (HUD)

The HUD is where you control the song's playback, and where you'll find controls for most of Capo's functionality.

Heads-Up Display

Its main component is the Control Strip—a set of controls displayed beneath the song's playback position that are grouped by their function.

Last updated: December 21, 2018