jdhogg wrote:software does not create songs
All you need is a guitar/piano, a few songbooks to see how its done and dictaphone or digital recorder to get your ideas down.
When you have some rough sketches then get the software.
That is true, software doesn't create songs. Songframe bills itself as a pre-daw software, which is very accurate. It comes (you have to download and register) a couple of free virtual instruments 4front pianos,bass, ez drummer lite. It has a plethora of chord progressions that can be searched by vintage, genre, section, number of measures, etc., you just drag the chords. It also allows substitution and offers choices based on chord before and after, or a color chart to audition chords according to feel or tension. So the songbook portion is the abundant chord progressions contained. You drag the sections and order into the active box, eg. intro, verse, chorus, bridge, ending... and choose how many measures you want of each section, it has a metronome, tempo settings, time sig etc. The dictaphone or digital recorder section is the one audio track you may record.
One of the neatest features imo is that it comes with a vast amount of scales and instrument ranges that can be highlighted on the melody track keyboard. So if your melody is to be written for a soprano, it highlights the range of the soprano, or violin or saxophone or whatever, plus it will highlite a scale of your choosing, say gypsy minor or blues pentatonic. If you start with melody first let's say, you can tap out one note to the rhythm of your melody, say an "A", and then just drag each note afterwards to a highlited, according to range and scale, melody of your choosing. Then you may choose the chords for the melody. If you start out with a chord progression, you could work opposite.
When you get your song worked out, chord progressions, melody etc., you can save as a midi file, and it will place markers in your daw for the chords and sections in your daw along with the midi notes.
The software is only for composition and organization, it doesn't give you styles, melody or chord generators, such as say a band-in-the box. Though I suppose you could enter the chords and melody you make from songframe into bandinthebox if you needed styles?
I guess you could say you don't need a daw to record music, a word processor to write a novel, screenwriter software to write a screenplay, it just makes things a lot easier and organized. Songframe is for making the sketches actually, so if you already have the sketches it would be more appropriate to move to a daw.