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Well, I think the question is converting an MP3 to a MIDI, not vice versa. It really sounds more complex than it really is. Maybe I should just start a service of converting MIDi files for folks for a small fee if they can't do it, or just can't figure it all out. So I don't bother with MIDi converter software any longer.
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Yes, it's a bit of work, but the end results have been far superior to any converter I have used. This is and has been the best option I have found that works for converting my MIDi files to work with the LOR Sequencer and in my shows. But in the editor software, I can also change the volume if it's too high. On my set up I go to the Recording Options and select the Stereo Mixer, set the recording volume level low, about 1/4 of the way up on the slider and get very good results. You may also need to select an option from the properties of your sound cards recording options. I use a program called Switch for those conversions, Switch also allows me to convert ACC, WAV, MP3, OGG, WMA and a lot of other audio file formats. I use two commercial programs that came with my Video Editing software (Magix Music Editor) and with a CD/DVD Burner, NERO WAVE EDITOR, which is limited to how many times (10 I think) you can save as an MP3, so I use it to convert to PCM-WAV format, then use the Magix software to convert the WAV to MP3 or use a free program that will convert a WAV (Stereo) into an MP3 file. I don't know much about Audacity as I don't use that, but if it supports a record option, you may be able to use it to convert your MIDi files as outlined above. Once the MIDi file has played, I stop the recording process, then I do have to go and EDIT the recording to remove excess silence from the beginning and/or end of the file, once I am satisfied with the end result, I save the recording as an MP3 128k or 192k CBR (Constant Bit Rate) file, don't use VBR (Variable Bit Rate) as these don't always work well, especially if you also use the DC-MP3 Showtime Director, CBR's work much better and more reliably. So what I do is use an MP3/WAV music editor that supports a "RECORD" function, I then load the MIDi file into a seperate player and load the MP3 editing software, I press record on the editor, then play the MIDi file. I have converted many MIDi files to MP3, although I have tried several conversion type programs, NONE have worked very well in the conversions they did. With all that said, MIDI files definitely have advantages, since the MIDI Wizard can be used to do some things that are (in my opinion) really pretty neat. Perhaps what I'm trying to get across would be clearer if you were to listen to some MIDI files, so here are a bunch of them: Maybe there will be a guitar in there that plays mostly the same notes as the real guitar in the recording, but it won't sound like that same guitar, and it probably won't have all the nuances of the real thing either.Īnd, importantly, you're not going to hear a singer perhaps there will be some instrument that plays mostly the same notes as the singer sings, but it won't be a singer, let alone the singer from the recording, and you won't hear lyrics or anything. So, even if there is an MP3-to-MIDI converter, and even if it works well, when you play the MIDI file back, it won't sound like your MP3. Sheet music is very, very basic instructions, describing the core of the song, while an actual recording is a chaotic mass of sound waves that contain far more details and nuances and so forth than is represented in the sheet music. You can use the instructions on the sheet music to make another performance that's kind of like the performance that that orchestra made, but it won't be the same.
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To illustrate the difference, you can perhaps think of an MP3 as being a recording of an orchestral performance, whereas a MIDI file is more like the sheet music that the musicians used. MIDI is not just a different file format. But, if there are, they're definitely fundamentally different than (for example) MP3-to-WAV converters, in important ways. I'm not sure if there are any MP3-to-MIDI converters - it strikes me as a very difficult problem to solve.