| 1. | How do you access your music loops? |
| 2. | How do you find loops with the Loop Browser? |
| 3. | What is a quick way to create a new track? |
| 4. | How do you make your musical loop in the timeline (called a region) longer or shorter? |
| 5. | What do the Solo and Mute buttons in the Tracks column do? |
| 6. | List three ways to get video into a GarageBand project. |
| 7. | How do you toggle the counter between musical notation and absolute time? |
| 8. | How do you indicate where you want your songs placed in iTunes? |
| 1. | Click the Loop Browser button; it looks like an eye. |
| 2. | Click an instrument in the first three columns of buttons in the Loops section; then add search criteria by clicking buttons in the next three columns of buttons. Your search results show up at the far-right end of the Loop Browser. |
| 3. | Drag a loop into the music workspace to create a new track. |
| 4. | Position your cursor near the top half of either end of the region. Your cursor will turn into a loop pointer, which lets you drag the region to make it longer or shorter. |
| 5. | The Solo button silences all other tracks and plays only the selected track. The Mute button silences only the selected track; the other tracks play as usual. |
| 6. | Click the Media Browser button, select video, and drag a video into the workspace. Drag a movie clip from the Finder directly into the workspace. Or export video directly from iMovie to open in a new GarageBand project. |
| |
| 7. | Click the tiny icons on the left side of the digital counter. They are a musical note (displays musical time) and a clock (displays absolute time). |
| 8. | Choose GarageBand > Preferences, and click the General tab to record your iTunes export details. |