Capture

Ideas

A judgment-free place for riffs, progressions, lyrics, and anything else that isn't a finished song yet. Kept separate from your library on purpose.

On this page

Not everything you play is a song. Sometimes it's four bars you stumbled into, a chord change you want to remember, a lyric that showed up in the shower. Songs is for things you're deliberately learning; Ideas is for everything before that — the messy, half-formed stuff that doesn't deserve its own polished library entry yet, but does deserve to not disappear.

Capturing an idea

Tap Capture idea from Home and pick one of two modes:

Capture flow, Audio mode mid-recording
Capturing an idea — Audio mode, mid-recording

The capture sheet also shows your three most recent ideas right there, so if you're circling back to something you started yesterday, you can jump straight to it without leaving the sheet to go dig through the full list.

The Ideas list

Every captured idea shows up here, newest first. Filter by All, Favorites, Audio, Notes, Today, or This Week once the list gets long enough that scrolling stops being the fastest way to find something.

Ideas tab, filtered list view
The Ideas list, filtered down

Working with an idea

Open an audio idea and you get a trim-and-play waveform editor — the same one Songs uses for practice takes — so you can cut it down to just the part worth keeping. Open a text idea and you get the full editor, ready to keep adding to.

Either kind can carry a riff tab — a small block of plain-text tab notation, the kind you'd scribble on a napkin, that the app can also play back through its guitar sampler with a cursor moving across the notes as it plays. It's a fast way to capture a lick exactly as you meant to play it, not just describe it.

Linking an idea to a song

Any idea — audio or text — can be tagged to a song already in your library, or used as the starting point for a brand-new one. Once it's linked, that riff you captured half-asleep on the couch shows up right on the song's own detail page, sitting alongside everything else you know about it. Nothing gets lost between "idea" and "song" — it's the same piece of music, just further along.