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Want to edit MIDI files, but not sure how to go about it? Keep reading to find out.
MIDI is a data format for music that contains only control signals and no actual audio content (waveforms). It controls sound generators such as external synthesizers or internal VST instruments, i.e. virtual software synthesizers. A MIDI file can be thought of as a universal remote control for instruments. Different instruments can be played with a single MIDI file.
The great advantage of MIDI is that all control signals can be changed at will – for example, each note can be shifted to a different pitch or placed at a different bar position. A touch that was too hard, a tone that is too loud can easily be made softer and quieter. Mistakes or passages you don't need for a track can simply be deleted, and missing notes are added. MIDI is perfect for musicians who aren't happy with certain parts of an instrumental recording and want to correct the recorded notes.
The disadvantage of MIDI is that the sound is not yet determined. It is only produced during playback, so everything depends on which instrument is playing the MIDI file. If you've finished editing a MIDI file and want to play it back on another computer, it might be disappointing if, instead of the original VST instrument, you only hear the computer's standard sound chip and it sounds cheap and thin.
So what's the right course of action? It's best to convert the MIDI file into a "real" audio file in WAV format at the end of the editing process. This will ensure that it sounds exactly as you intended on any computer or playback device, because now you have an "official" waveform that contains each and every sound detail.
MIDI files offer unlimited possibilities for music production, but they require a number of things – the right instruments to play, detailed editing functions for control signals and, last but not least, the ability to convert MIDI to audio.
For all this, you need a music program that covers all the bases. Music Maker is a complete virtual recording studio with a wide range of high-quality VST instruments for your MIDI files. The integrated MIDI editor offers professional editing functions and the formats WAV, MP3, OGG, WMA or FLAC are available for audio export to ensure that everything sounds exactly as planned later on.
Best of all, the basic version of the software is completely free and you can try it out for as long as you want. If you want to expand your options later, you can download additional VST instruments and program features from the program's in-app store. In actual fact, you can play all kinds of genres on instruments from a church organ and African drums to contrabass! You'll be amazed at how lifelike these "natural" instruments can sound when playing your MIDI files.
This article explains how to load or create MIDI files on your computer with Music Maker, edit them and finally output them again as MIDI or audio files.
Here are the basic steps:
You can then start to make a DJ remix.
If you want to edit an existing MIDI file, first load it into the project. Alternatively, you can create a new, empty MIDI file and add MIDI notes to it. We'll get to that in just a bit.
You can also drag the MIDI file onto any other track. The top track, track 1, is ready for the included VST instrument "Concert Grand". This instrument offers a piano sound that is perfect for playing most MIDI files. But you can also set another VST instrument:
The VST instrument's user interface, where you can adjust the sound, will then open.
The yellow bar above shows the playback area. You can set this range tostretch across the entire MIDI file so that you can hear everything.
As already mentioned, you can also create a new, empty MIDI file and addMIDI notes and control commands.
The newly created object isstill empty at this stage. It needs to be "filled" with MIDI notes.
You can now edit your MIDI file in a variety of ways: by setting new notes, moving or deleting existing notes, changing the velocity, splitting a long MIDI file into several short ones, or even adding high-quality audio effects to the MIDI recording.
Most of these edits can be done with the MIDI editor.
The MIDI editor starts up in matrix edit mode, which is the most intuitive view. Here, the MIDI notes are displayed as rectangles in a matrix. On the left is a piano keyboard where each key of the keyboard corresponds to a row in the matrix.
The MIDI editor also offers other views – simply use the buttons at the top left of the dialog to switch views:
The MIDI editor is a professional MIDI editing tool with many powerful functions. This article only covers the basic functions, but in the menus you will find many other special functions.
You can now move the selected notes to another position in the matrix.
When doing this, use the bar division above for orientation. 64 possible bar positions are preset, which corresponds to 64th note steps. This fine grid can be changed in the drop-down menu up top, for example to eighth or sixteenth note rhythms. By holding down the Alt key, you can bypass the grid completely and freely position the notes.
Velocity values can also be edited as well as the note positions. This will change a sharp, hard keystroke to a softer, quieter sound (or vice versa).
The columns from the matrix will now continue in the additional range that opens below. Every MIDI note has a bar where it begins. The bar displays the velocity, which can be adjusted as follows:
To create dynamic effects, you can also draw in the velocity and therefore the volume too. For example, you can quickly and easily create a ramp in which all affected notes become equally louder:
For new, empty MIDI files, you'll need to start by adding notes. Even when working with existing MIDI files, notes can be added to the MIDI file.
There are two ways to do this:
To enter new notes by hand in the matrix, switch to the pencil tool. You simply click with this tool to place new notes in the matrix. We recommend this method in particular if you want to "program" precise musical structures such as a defined drum beat or a bass loop.
For an expressive melody or sudden arpeggios, it's better to use the recording function. Then means you play the notes intuitively on either your screen or computer keyboard to create musical sounds. A little experience with a keyboard instrument can help for this.
Letters and various symbols will now appear on the keys. When you press these keys on your computer keyboard, this will generate the corresponding sounds.
Tip: Just use the top row of the computer keyboard for the white keys.
A MIDI keyboard can be played directly as soon as you have connected it to your computer.
The recording starts from the current position of the playback marker. As soon as the playback marker reaches the MIDI object, you can record new notes. If you record for a longer length of time than the length of the MIDI object, the object will be automatically extended.
You can then edit your recording in the MIDI editor as described above.
Alternatively, you can start a MIDI recordingdirectly within the project. A new, additional MIDI object will then be createdand filled with notes directly from the start of the recording.
A MIDI recording can result in long MIDI objects if the recording continues for a while after the last note. However, sometimes you need to cut a part from an existing MIDI file, for example empty ranges or because the notes there are unusable.
Cutting is done directly in the track, not in the MIDI editor:
In the open MIDI editor, the two object ends appear as blue lines. You can use these lines to establish exactly where the object edges are, meaning you can cut any MIDI file with a high level of precision and, for example, place its beginning right before the first note.
Each MIDI file can be edited with all available track and master effects. To do this, open the mixer by clicking on the "M" key. The track effects, which affect all objects in the track, can be opened via the FX button on the channel strip. The master effects can be found on the far right in the mixer.
Remember, these effects are not MIDI effects that are included in the MIDI file, but audio effects. This means that if you export a MIDI file again after editing it, for example to send it to another music-making friend, the effects won't be included in the file. Effects editing means you need to export the MIDI file in an audio format (WAV, MP3, OGG, WMA or FLAC).
As mentioned above, you can output your edited MIDI file as a MIDI file at the end. The result is a MIDI file that is the same length as the MIDI object in the track and that contains all note and velocity settings from the MIDI editor.
You can also convert the MIDI file to an audio file that contains no control signals but all of the sound information. This audio file will then sound the same on all devices as it does when played back in Music Maker. You can't edit in the MIDI editor afterwards, however.
To export only the current playback range from the project, make sure you select the "Only export the area between the start and end markers" option in the export dialog.
You can expand the basic free version of Music Maker by purchasing additional VST instruments with which you can play your MIDI files.
Tip Some VST instruments are available free of charge. All you have to do is register as a MAGIX customer.
Upgrade to the latest version here. Please have your account registration information or the serial number for your software ready.
Upgrade to the latest version here. Please have your account registration information or the serial number for your software ready.
Upgrade to the latest version here. Please have your account registration information or the serial number for your software ready.