How to Use the GarageBand On-Screen Keyboard
You may not think of your Mac keyboard as a music-making machine, but it can be. Here’s how:
Changing Octaves in the Standard Layout on the Mac
The standard Musical Typing keyboard displays an octave and a half at any one time mapped to the “asdf” row of keys on a standard computer keyboard. Changing octaves is performed in one of two ways. The Musical Typing window shows the Mac keys that correspond to musical keys on the piano. The Musical Typing window also displays a keyboard above the keys, indicating which octave is currently active. This is the standard setup for playing the piano in GarageBand.
Select the x key on the Musical Typing keyboard to move up one octave or the z key to move down one octave. Move multiple octaves by repeatedly selecting the x or z keys.The second method uses the representation of a piano keyboard near the top of the Musical Typing window. Select the highlighted area on the piano keyboard, which represents the keys assigned to the typing keyboard, then drag the highlighted section left or right on the piano keyboard. Stop dragging when the highlighted section is in the range you want to play.
Alternative Onscreen Keyboard on the Mac
Besides the standard keyboard, you can opt to toggle to a piano keyboard with a five-octave range by selecting the keyboard icon in the upper-left corner of the Musical Typing keyboard. This piano keyboard doesn’t assign any of the keys to correspond to the Mac keyboard. As a result, you can only play this keyboard one note at a time, using a mouse or trackpad. This layout offers a wider range of notes, and playing a single note at a time is helpful when editing the work you create.
How to Turn Your iPad Into a GarageBand Piano
The GarageBand iPad app has a touch piano keyboard option that works differently from the Mac version. Still, it’s as easy to access and as much fun to play. Shown here is the iPadOS 13 version.
How to Connect a MIDI Keyboard to a Mac
If you have a MIDI keyboard, you can connect it to your Mac. When MIDI (Musical Instrument Digital Interface) was first developed, it used a 5-pin round DIN connector along with multiple cables to handle MIDI IN and MIDI OUT. These older MIDI interfaces are mostly obsolete. Most modern keyboards use standard USB ports to handle MIDI connections. As a result, you don’t need any special adapters, interface boxes, or special driver software to connect a MIDI keyboard to a Mac. Plug the MIDI keyboard into an available Mac USB port. When you launch GarageBand, the app detects the MIDI device. To try out your MIDI keyboard, create a new project in GarageBand, then choose Project Templates in the left sidebar. Select Keyboard Collection. When the project opens, touch a few keys on the keyboard to hear the keyboard through GarageBand.
Reset a MIDI Interface
If you don’t hear the MIDI keyboard in GarageBand, reset the GarageBand MIDI interface. You should now be able to play your MIDI keyboard through your Mac and record your sessions using GarageBand.