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  2. Backing track - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Backing_track

    A backing track can be used by a one person band (e.g., a singer-guitarist) to add any amount of bass, drums and keyboards to their live shows without the cost of hiring extra musicians. A small pop group or rock band (e.g., a power trio) can use backing tracks to add a string section, horn section, drumming or backing vocals to their live shows.

  3. Miming in instrumental performance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miming_in_instrumental...

    Miming in instrumental performance or finger-synching is the act of musicians pretending to play their instruments in a live show, audiovisual recording or broadcast. Miming in instrument playing is the musical instrument equivalent of lip-syncing in singing performances, the action of pretending to sing while a prerecorded track of the singing is sounding over a PA system or on a TV broadcast ...

  4. Offstage musicians and singers in popular music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Offstage_musicians_and...

    Backing tracks can be as simple as a single prerecorded instrument, such as a recording of a pipe organ, which is impossible to move onstage, to string section recordings done in the studio, to full rhythm section recordings with bass, guitar, keyboards and drums. Some backing tracks also include backup vocals. An offstage technician or audio ...

  5. Instrumental - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Instrumental

    Example from Free Music Archive, Steve Combs & Delta Is - "Theme Q", bass, drum, guitar, keyboard, 4 min 53 s. In commercial popular music, instrumental tracks are sometimes renderings, remixes of a corresponding release that features vocals, but they may also be compositions originally conceived without vocals. One example of a genre in which ...

  6. Live Without a Net (Van Halen video) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Live_Without_a_Net_(Van...

    Originally released on VHS and Laserdisc, Live Without A Net was re-released on DVD in 2004 with both Stereo and Surround Sound - Dolby 5.1 and DTS mixes. [4] There is an Easter egg on the 2004 DVD, a short, silent clip of a man driving a small car and playing guitar. The clip is from the video Amsterdam by the band Guster.

  7. Band-in-a-Box - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Band-in-a-Box

    It can create backgrounds, melodies or solos for almost any chord progressions used in Western popular music, and can play them in any of thousands of different music styles. [4] Band-in-a-Box was first introduced in 1990 for PC computers and the Atari ST. The creator of the software is a Canadian, Dr. Peter Gannon, for whom "PG Music" is named ...

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