Timeline Basics

6 min read Beginner

The timeline is where your song takes shape. It's a visual representation of your arrangement—every clip, every track, every moment of your music laid out horizontally across time.

Understanding the Timeline

The timeline shows time horizontally (left to right) and tracks vertically (top to bottom). Each horizontal lane is a track, and the colored blocks on those tracks are clips.

Visual tip: Clips display waveforms so you can see the audio content at a glance—loud parts appear taller, quiet parts shorter.

Navigating the Timeline

Zooming

Scrolling

Setting the Playhead

Working with Clips

Selecting Clips

Moving Clips

  1. Select the clip
    Click on the clip you want to move.
  2. Drag to new position
    Click and hold, then drag left/right to change time position, or up/down to change track.
  3. Release to place
    Clips snap to the nearest beat by default for tight timing.
Tip: Hold Cmd/Ctrl while dragging to temporarily disable snap and place clips freely.

Duplicating Clips

Deleting Clips

Trimming Clips

Trimming lets you shorten a clip from either end without deleting the underlying audio.

  1. Hover over a clip edge
    Move your cursor to the left or right edge of a clip. The cursor changes to a resize handle.
  2. Drag inward
    Pull the edge toward the center to trim. The clip shortens but the audio is preserved—you can always extend it back.
  3. Drag outward
    If you trimmed too much, drag the edge back out to restore the hidden audio.
Non-destructive: Trimming doesn't delete audio. You're just hiding parts of the clip. Drag the edge back out to reveal the full content.

Splitting Clips

Split a clip into two separate clips at the playhead position:

  1. Position the playhead where you want to split
  2. Select the clip to split
  3. Press S or right-click and choose Split at Playhead

Loop Mode

Loop mode repeats a section of your timeline continuously:

  1. Set loop region
    Click and drag on the ruler to select a region, or set loop start/end points in the transport bar.
  2. Enable loop
    Press L or click the loop button in the transport bar. The loop region appears highlighted.
  3. Play
    When playback reaches the loop end, it jumps back to the loop start automatically.
Tip: Loop mode is perfect for practicing a section, auditioning changes, or building up layers.

Snap Settings

Snap controls how clips align when you move or trim them:

Access snap settings from the toolbar or hold Cmd/Ctrl to temporarily disable snap.

Timeline Keyboard Shortcuts

SpacePlay/Pause
EnterStop and return to start
LToggle loop mode
SSplit clip at playhead
BackspaceDelete selected clips
Cmd/Ctrl + DDuplicate selection
Cmd/Ctrl + ASelect all clips
Cmd/Ctrl + ZUndo
Alt + scrollZoom in/out

Next Steps