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#164668 - 08/12/05 07:14 AM
Re: Keyboard testpage
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Anonymous
Unregistered
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Originally posted by babylon: If I am not mistaken, many arranger keyboards use GM midi voices to play play midi files.these voices are designed to be homogenous,thus, making good comparisons nullified. Hello, What you say is true and not true at the same time. If an instrument has the ability to play SMF’s (standard MIDI files) through its own sound engine, then it must also comply with the GM (General MIDI) specification. On the surface, this would mean that any given SMF would sound very close to identical coming from any SMF/GM instrument. However, the specifications have been re-written or added to over the years and each manufacturer has their own idea of just how things should work (which sort of blows the whole compatibility idea out of the water). All of the arranger keyboards and most of the workstation instruments available today has at least 1 bank of GM sounds (128 total sounds in a specific order as per the spec) while some instruments have 2 or more banks of GM compatible sounds. Other instruments offer a way to switch out the relatively lame GM sounds for better sounds that are contained in the instrument. I.e. Instead of using GM Piano1 it may be possible to use a better quality Piano sound from another bank. With this in mind, you can see how playing the same SMF in various brands/models could potentially sound entirely different. The idea of Doc-z’s comparison is fine. But I think it would be fairer to first hear the SMF played from each instrument without ANY alterations to the file. Allowing submitters to edit or alter the file brings in to the picture the talents of those individuals and shadows the instruments ability to playback a SMF as it was original intended. A second comparison for those who have the desire to alter the original SMF would be fun as well, but I think it would be the fairest to start with a SMF with no alterations. Just my thoughts, Dave
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#164669 - 08/12/05 07:14 AM
Re: Keyboard testpage
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Senior Member
Registered: 07/21/05
Posts: 5401
Loc: English Riviera, UK
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Yes all Midi files follow the GM Standard for compatibility, however once they are loaded into the instrument, you can replace the GM Sounds with the best sounds in the keyboard, before converting to MP3. As there seems to be some concerns with file size, it may be better to use a WMA file, as at 128k it gives as good quality as MP3 at 160K, but with a smaller file size. (Also, as all Windows systems come with Media Player, which can do the conversion, you will not need any additional software)(But do check recording levels)
Bill
_________________________
English Riviera: Live entertainment, Real Ale, Great Scenery, Great Beaches, why would anyone want to live anywhere else (I�m definitely staying put).
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#164672 - 08/12/05 07:51 AM
Re: Keyboard testpage
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Member
Registered: 08/10/05
Posts: 436
Loc: Norway
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Ok, I appreciate the different inputs.
It is fine by me if we do two files, one "vanilla" and one with everything full blast from effects and stuff like that, or maybe we could have that in the MIDI file? Like intro/first verse is vanilla, and second verse is full hard core?
My idea was to take a standard file, and let people modify that using their keyboard, to produce the best sounding result that keyboard can produce, using both their talent, skill and the quality of their instrument. This will also show the real potential in the instruments, from a real world perspective, and not the perspective of the engineers at the production companies.
How you play the MIDI through your keyboard, is your business, if you load it through a disk in your keyboard, transfer it, or use a computer based sequencer is all ok, no criteria here.
I do think MP3 is the way to go, and since the midifile intended should be shorter than 60 seconds, I think the filesize will stay in the 1mb region. MP3 is more "global" than WMA.
Doc-Z
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