Built From Real Frustration Inside The DAW
TrackTuner started from a simple problem: too many unfinished tracks - and no tools that understood real arrangement behavior.
After years of producing music, it became clear that the hardest part was rarely the idea itself.
The real challenge was:
- Structure
- Transitions
- Movement
- Arrangement flow
- Drum movement
TrackTuner started as personal workflow systems built to solve the arrangement and movement problems that leave tracks unfinished.
Over time, the arrangement engine evolved through constant iteration and real-world testing across unfinished projects, transitions and arrangement edge cases.
The goal was never automatic music creation. The goal was helping producers move tracks forward faster.
The music stays yours.
Built For Real Arrangement Workflow
TrackTuner focuses on unfinished tracks, arrangement movement and editable MIDI workflow built for the DAW.
Song Arranger exports Arrangement MIDI for structure and section flow, while Drum Arranger exports editable Drum Arrangement MIDI built around transitions, builds and movement.
- Arrangement flow
- Transitions
- Repetition
- Energy movement
- Rhythmic behavior
- Section structure
The goal is workflow support for real producers inside the DAW.
Built to help producers move unfinished tracks forward inside the DAW.Built Around Real Arrangement Behavior
TrackTuner evolved through years of unfinished projects, arrangement rebuilding and real production workflow experimentation.
The system uses:
- Structural mapping
- Energy movement
- Transition timing
- Arrangement flow
- Section mapping
- Workflow interpretation
Music structure is full of nuance. Two sections can technically look similar while feeling emotionally different. Transitions can be subtle. Energy can evolve gradually instead of abruptly.
This is why TrackTuner focuses on workflow guidance instead of pretending to automate creativity.
A New Type of Music Engine
TrackTuner connects structural analysis and MIDI workflow through one proprietary unified DSP engine.
The system focuses on:
- Proprietary unified DSP engine
- Energy movement
- Transient density
- Structural contrast
- Repetition patterns
- Section boundaries
- Build, drop and break detection
- Arrangement-aware drum transitions
Why The Results Sometimes Behave Unexpectedly
TrackTuner is designed as workflow guidance for unfinished tracks - not automatic arrangement replacement.
Because music is nuanced, the output may sometimes differ from how you personally think about the track. That is normal.
The tools are meant to:
- Accelerate workflow
- Reveal arrangement movement
- Suggest structure direction
- Reduce blank-page fatigue
- Help producers move forward faster
Practical Notes From The Workflow
Transparent answers about how the workflow systems and MIDI exports behave inside the DAW.
Song Arranger
Why can Song Arranger map sections differently sometimes?
Music structure is nuanced. Arrangement MIDI maps movement, repetition and contrast into editable DAW guidance, while your creative intent may define sections differently.
Why can the sketch sound choppy?
The sketch rearranges source regions as a structural reference. It is designed to show flow, not to become a finished edit or polished bounce.
Why are transitions marked?
Transition markers show where energy or rhythmic behavior changes so you can rebuild momentum clearly inside the DAW.
Why does the suggested flow differ from the original?
The suggested flow is an Arrangement MIDI reference based on movement and repetition. It is a starting point for your own DAW decisions.
Why does BPM and time signature matter?
The timeline is mapped in bars. Correct grid information keeps section boundaries, blank additions and Arrangement MIDI aligned with your project.
Is the sketch meant to be a finished arrangement?
No. Use it as a visual and audible guide while rebuilding the arrangement with your own clips, transitions and taste.
Drum Arranger
Why can the BPM grid vary slightly?
The workflow reads transient timing from audio. Swing, loose performances and unusual attacks can shift the MIDI grid slightly.
Why does the MIDI sometimes extend past the audio?
Drum MIDI is organized into complete bars. A track ending between bars or fading out may leave a small tail to trim in your DAW.
Why are fills not always perfect?
Fills follow transition markers. A workflow export cannot fully represent artistic intent, so a producer may refine timing or density.
Why can arrangement interpretation differ?
Two sections can share similar energy while serving different musical roles. The output reflects measured behavior rather than a final musical judgment.
Is this meant to be a finished drum track?
No. Drum Arranger gives you an editable, arrangement-aware MIDI starting point built for further production.
Why can transitions feel different from the original?
Drum Arrangement MIDI emphasizes structural motion. Your final sound selection and editing determine how that transition feels.
How TrackTuner Is Different
Most tools either analyze audio or generate patterns. TrackTuner does both at the same time, using one structure map for arrangement and drums.
- Arrangement-aware MIDI
- DSP-aware drums
- Genre-aware structure
- Deterministic, non-hallucinating output
- Built for unfinished tracks
The result is a calm, deterministic workflow system for producers who want to keep moving inside the DAW.
Contact: borreholli@outlook.com