Introduction To MIDI
Introduction To MIDI
Introduction To MIDI
MIDI FILES
MIDI files support only instrumental music,
not vocals or nonmusical audio. MIDI provides
a powerful way to create and distribute
instrumental music on the Internet.
MIDIcompatible hardware and software are widely
available for creating music and MIDI files.
A major strength of MIDI files is their compact
size. A 20-minute of MIDI instrumental music
requires only 100KB of data compared to a 7.6minute of CD-quality audio that requires 80 MB
of disk space.
MIDI FILES
The secret of a MIDI files compactness is that
it contains no audio. Instead, it is a sequence of
commands containing instructions on how to
generate music. The commands in a midi file must
be interpreted by hardware or software that can
translate those commands into audio.
When you think of MIDI think of sheet electronic
music. For the music to be heard, the sheet
musics directives must be played on one or more
musical instruments. The sheet music itself is not a
sound, just as a MIDI file is not audio.
PATCH
A patch is a setup that creates the characteristic
sounds of a musical instrument such as a piano or
guitar.
MIDI has 128 patch numbers or programs, which
are codes that identify musical instruments. A
patch map is a table used by a MIDI device to
determine which instrument sound is assigned to
which patch number. A patch map may assign
program 41 to a violin, for example, program 33 to
acoustic bass, and program 23 to a harmonica
GENERAL MIDI
A recommended specification for consumer
electronic MIDI instruments that includes a
uniform numbering of instrumental and drum
sounds.
One of the main problems that had caused
headaches for MIDI users, was the inconsistent way
that various instrument sounds were numerically
arranged between different brands of MIDI
synthesizers. Because of this inconsistency, it was
difficult to share MIDI song files with one another.
GENERAL MIDI
About twenty years ago, Roland Corporation
and Passport Designs spearheaded an effort
to establish a new minimum of industry
standard for MIDI instruments. The basic idea
was to create a universal, specific preset
instrument and drum setting that any
manufacturer could easily include within their
synthesizers. This new specification became
known as General MIDI.
GENERAL
MIDI
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XG
SYNTHESIZERS
A synthesizer is a piece of electronic
hardware (or equivalent software running on a
computer) that can combine and manipulate
multiple tones in complex ways to create
musical notes.
Some sound cards, such as some of the
SoundBlaster series from Creative Labs, have
basic built-in synthesis capability.
The terms multitimbral and polyphonic are
used to describe synthesizers.
SAMPLERS
A device that records short, sound
samples originally from real musical
instruments, singers voice or even a dogs bark.
This unit also has a disk drive for loading and
saving sound samples. A front-panel interface
enables the user to edit samples.
When a sampler receives a MIDI command, it
executes it by playing one or more samples at a
pitch and duration defined by the command
MIDI SEQUENCERS
The sequencer is what plays the music. It
generates the commands sent to the
synthesizer and samplers to generate the
music (and the synthesizers and samplers
generate the audio).