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MIDI
Beginner’s guide to Cakewalk software
MIDI
Besides introducing MIDI in this section, we’ll explain the following MIDI topics:
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“MIDI channels, interfaces, inputs, and outputs”
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“MIDI files, projects, tracks, and clips”
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“Controlling which sounds you hear”
Short for Musical Instrument Digital Interface, MIDI is a system that lets an electronic instrument or
computer control other instruments. MIDI is largely a set of commands, called MIDI messages, that
cause an electronic instrument to play specific sounds at specific times, and also to play those
sounds in the style that you dictate. A MIDI instrument functions very much like a player piano, only
instead of using a roll of paper with holes punched in it, a MIDI instrument needs a software program
or other MIDI instrument to turn its notes on and off. When you record MIDI, you don’t record the
sound of the instrument you’re recording—you record the commands that play that instrument in the
way you want it to be played. For example, when you press a key on a MIDI keyboard while your
Cakewalk software is recording, the software just records the fact that a certain note was pressed
and then released—the software doesn’t record the actual sound of the note. When you play back
the recording, the software takes control of your MIDI instrument and turns the note on and then off
at the same time in the song that you did. MIDI notes can be read and displayed by a music notation
program. Digital audio, the sound format used by CDs, Wave files, and MP3s, can not. After you
record your MIDI data you can use Cakewalk to convert the MIDI data into digital audio so that you
can create CDs, MP3s, or Windows Media files.
MIDI has advantages and disadvantages when compared to digital audio. MIDI files are much
smaller than audio files, since MIDI data is only made up of the commands to play instruments,
instead of the actual sound of the instruments themselves. You can usually copy one or more MIDI
files onto a floppy disk. You can easily email MIDI files. You can save a MIDI file in a format called a
Standard MIDI File, and then open it and use it in many different programs. You can record MIDI
music as slowly as you want, and then change the tempo in your software to play it back at any
tempo you want. Audio files, however, can only play back at approximately the same tempo they
were recorded at without drastically altering the sound quality. It’s easy to edit and transpose MIDI
files, since they are so small and you’re just editing commands, not actual sound. MIDI files can be
printed out as standard musical notation or lead sheets. It can be harder to make MIDI music sound
as natural as audio. If you don’t record MIDI music in real time, it can sound mechanical. Some MIDI
instruments, especially some of the acoustic-sounding instruments such as brass, strings, and
guitars that you find on the built-in synthesizers of low-priced sound cards, sound artificial. However,
percussive sounds usually sound quite good on MIDI instruments, and are much easier to record
than a real drum set. You can also play back MIDI data through any number of hardware or software
samplers that use recordings (samples) of any instrument you can imagine as sound sources.
Summary of Contents for sonar x3
Page 1: ...SONAR X3 Reference Guide...
Page 4: ...4 Getting started...
Page 112: ...112 Tutorial 1 Creating playing and saving projects Saving project files...
Page 124: ...124 Tutorial 3 Recording vocals and musical instruments...
Page 132: ...132 Tutorial 4 Playing and recording software instruments...
Page 142: ...142 Tutorial 5 Working with music notation...
Page 150: ...150 Tutorial 6 Editing your music...
Page 160: ...160 Tutorial 7 Mixing and adding effects...
Page 170: ...170 Tutorial 8 Working with video Exporting your video...
Page 570: ...570 Control Bar overview...
Page 696: ...696 AudioSnap Producer and Studio only Algorithms and rendering...
Page 720: ...720 Working with loops and Groove Clips Importing Project5 patterns...
Page 820: ...820 Drum maps and the Drum Grid pane The Drum Grid pane...
Page 848: ...848 Editing audio Audio effects audio plug ins...
Page 878: ...878 Software instruments Stand alone synths...
Page 1042: ...1042 ProChannel Producer and Studio only...
Page 1088: ...1088 Sharing your songs on SoundCloud Troubleshooting...
Page 1140: ...1140 Automation Recording automation data from an external controller...
Page 1178: ...1178 Multi touch...
Page 1228: ...1228 Notation and lyrics Working with lyrics...
Page 1282: ...1282 Synchronizing your gear MIDI Machine Control MMC...
Page 1358: ...1358 External devices Working with StudioWare...
Page 1362: ...1362 Using CAL Sample CAL files...
Page 1386: ...1386 Troubleshooting Known issues...
Page 1394: ...1394 Hardware setup Set up to record digital audio...
Page 1400: ...1400 MIDI files...
Page 1422: ...1422 Initialization files Initialization file format...
Page 1463: ...1463 Misc enhancements New features in SONAR X3...
Page 1470: ...1470 Comparison...
Page 1518: ...1518 Included plug ins Instruments...
Page 1532: ...1532 Cyclone Using Cyclone...
Page 1694: ...1694 Beginner s guide to Cakewalk software Audio hardware sound cards and drivers...
Page 1854: ...1854 Preferences dialog Customization Nudge Figure 518 The Nudge section...
Page 1856: ...1856 Preferences dialog Customization Snap to Grid Figure 519 The Snap to Grid section...
Page 1920: ...1920 Snap Scale Settings dialog...
Page 2042: ...2042 View reference Surround panner...