
MIDI and Guitar - Why?
Why Would a Guitarist Want to Know about MIDI?by Mike Furlong Editor: While I began on guitar myself, I have become very fond of MIDi for all it can do - both with guitars and keyboards. Because there are MIDI guitars! And there are MIDI interface attachments
for regular guitars. You can make totally new sounds, change your
existing sounds, or add instrumentation you never thought possible
before!
If you used a keyboard
standalone (or without a PC), the MIDI keyboard MIDI out would
be connected to the MIDI in of a sound module or other keyboard.
The keyboard could then be used to play multiple sound modules
at the same time. If you used a MIDI keyboard with your PC, a
MIDI keyboard MIDI out would be connected to your PC's MIDI in.
The PC's MIDI out would be connected to the keyboard's MIDI in.
When you press a key on the MIDI keyboard the MIDI note number
and velocity (how hard you hit the key) is transmitted over the
MIDI. This is somewhat like an old piano-roll piano. If you've
ever examined one, you know the holes in the roll let a pin slip
through as the paper rolls by (with the speed that the roll is
turning controlling the tempo). And the pin corresponds to the
piano key that will be hit at a particular time (relative to
the start of the roll). MIDI data is like this except it also
includes some dynamics (i.e. how hard the key was hit). When the
keyboard is operated "standalone", normally
the MIDI out just loops back to the MIDI in. This is done internally
so you don't need to put a MIDI cable in. Most MIDI keyboards let
you turn off this automatic loopback when you're working with a PC
so that you don't get double notes from the keyboard and from the
PC echoing it back. It's as if the keyboard and sounds are two separate
pieces. There's an assumption here. The PC must have some software
directing the MIDI connectors on the PC for this to happen. That
software is usually a MIDI sequencer which functions almost like
a multi-track analog recorder. With the MIDI sequencer running, you
start the record function and the sequencer program will store all
the MIDI notes it receives into memory (and let you file them to
disk later into a MIDI file). The recorded MIDI file can be examined
with a graph showing the notes (and it looks almost exactly like
a piano-roll). Most sequencer software is smart enough to display
(and print) in standard musical notation as well. Cool!
MIDI Guitar Resources: MIDI TAB - The files on this site are designed for every guitarist who is either not confident enough to jam with other musicians yet, who can't find any musicians to jam with or any other reason that might arise.
|
| Recently
Composed Music News
When You Want Friends So Bad You'll Pay |
Recently
Composed Music Home
Music
Licensing - Music
Articles - Downloading Music Software - Frank Zappa and Steve Vai - Beginner Guitar Lesson - Electric Bass Guitars
Steve Vai & Joe Satriani Play Ibanez Guitars - MIDI Guitars - Vintage Guitars - Learning Music Symbols - Favorite Musicians - Copyright Infringement - Watch Music Videos
Music on the Web: New Music CD's and Tape - Study Music
© 2010 Recently Composed Music