Can I save edited MIDIs?
No explicit, hateful, or hurtful language. Nothing illegal.
Hi, I recently downloaded the Synthesia program and I was wondering, is there any way I can edit a MIDI file and then export it as a new MIDI file? Like to edit notes or instrument types and then save it to my computer or convert it to an mp3 file. I'm not sure if it's possible but I would really like to know. Thank you!
Yeah, Synthesia is a player-only at this point. (We've actually made the very conscious decision to never change an existing MIDI file under any conditions. I've been frustrated in the past when an editor wiped out a bunch of good data in a song, so I vowed Synthesia would never cause that problem for others.)
Good free MIDI editors include: Sekaiju, Musescore, and Finale Notepad.
Good free MIDI editors include: Sekaiju, Musescore, and Finale Notepad.
No, route your notes from your playing device e.g. via MidiYoke and MidiOX to another port which can go to another software where you can record. MidiOX can record itself by the way. Simply activate its log feature, select text format, use the ready command line tool for converting this text format to midi format. There you have your played midi file. Not satisfied? Still wanting it inside Synthesia? Start thinking in more directions, not being fixed and limited. Thinking is good.
Reaper is not the most user friendly ^^.But have many options
By the way about the suggestion to record session in freeplay mode i think it's a good idea no need to have a built in editor but just a recorder like in pianotec5 who indicate: number of notes, the lenght and the date.
By the way about the suggestion to record session in freeplay mode i think it's a good idea no need to have a built in editor but just a recorder like in pianotec5 who indicate: number of notes, the lenght and the date.
Does Synthesia have transpose, already? I know this from Van Basco Karaoke Player, which can be nice if you want to play along a string instrument, when the midi has a different tuning, so tuning the midi is easier then. Van Basco shifts the displayed notes, too, of course.