Frank Lennon's

"The MIDI Music Classroom"

 

         

....128 is the most important number in General Midi (GM)....there are 128(1-128 or 0-127) General Midi sounds or patches....127 is the highest volume level, 0 the lowest(0-127)....127 is full reverb, 0 is none....there are 128 positions in the stereo spectrum (64 to the left and 63 to the right with "0" being the centre)....there are 16 channels but endless tracks....Channel 10 is always the drum track.....

     

www.socc.ie/~irishmidifiles

Everything You Want To Know About Ireland!

Visit: http://www.oracleireland.com

 

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( THIS SITE IS BEST ENJOYED WITH THE SOUND SWITCHED ON
AND ATTACHED TO A QUALITY SOUND SOURCE ! )

Click on this icon  wpe2.jpg (1030 bytes) at the top of your 

screen to stop the MIDI files playing 

(This action will also stop "moving" icons) 

 

WHY MIDI?

For the Individual:     With a good sound source ie. computer soundcard, midi keyboard, sound module etc., you can   download from the Internet or purchase classical, pop, rock, dance, folk, country etc. midi files just to listen to or edit for your pleasure. (A midi file is a set of messages which sends instructions to your sound card or other sound source to play particular instruments or sounds known as 'patches'. These messages end up as a musical or sound effects piece which could be a 10 minute long symphony, a country tune, a set of sound effects for a drama production, a short 20 second sound bite etc. The quality of the end product depends on the quality of your sound card.)

For the Teacher:    Using midi files and a music sequencer you can create exactly the type of music you want your pupils to listen to, to play or indeed to edit from an original creation to a downloaded or purchased midi file. They can listen to individual instruments or groups of instruments within an orchestral piece. They can learn to play an instrument or piece of music by soloing the part, slowing it down, looping it to play over and over again or by printing out the notation and reading the music.

For the Musician:   With your laptop or midi file player plugged into a PA system in any environment, you can sing along with or accompany on a musical instrument, midi files (backing tracks) that you purchased or created yourself on a music sequencer. If you're a teaching musician rather than a music teacher you can use these midi files as backing tracks while demonstrating the piano, guitar, saxophone etc. It's like playing with a band, group, quintet, orchestra etc.

For the Songwriter/Composer  You can create the perfect backing track for that new song and then with other "live"  instruments plus vocals, record the whole lot to your computer's hard disk. Or you can create that elusive symphony and edit it to your heart's content. As well as all the above activities you can pan the instruments to anywhere, left, right or centre in the stereo spectrum. You can use the reverb on your sound source to bring individual  instruments to the foreground or push them into the background. The same reverb allows you to create an atmosphere from a large auditorium to a small room.

SOME THINGS YOU CAN DO WITH MIDI!

Record all your parts from a midi keyboard into a music sequencer ie. bass, flute, strings, guitar, drums indeed any of 128 different sounds: each note of each part can be lengthened, shortened, deleted, transposed etc: each sound or instrument can be changed to a different one anywhere in the music: the tempo can be speeded up or slowed down: you can copy and paste verses, choruses, bridge etc: you can alter volume, panning, reverb, chorus etc. levels: finally you can print-out individual  or all  parts: there are hundreds more actions you can take to create exactly the piece of music you want for exactly the environment you want. So go ahead.....................

TAKE TOTAL CONTROL OF YOUR MUSIC!!!

To download a MIDI file, lyric sheet or image, right click on the object and then click on one of the options offered ( save picture as; save target as etc.) and download it to a place where you know you will find it. Also give it a name you'll remember. Prior to going on the Internet it is always advisable to open a new folder preferably on your desktop to download to and maybe give it a name associated with what you're downloading eg. "Midi Files".

Many, if not all, of the Irish Midi Files arranged by myself, can be downloaded with lyrics and notes relating to the particular midi file. See the pages "Irish MIDI Files 2" and "Lyrics"  for this option.

PG Music's "Band -in-a-Box" was frequently used for basic arrangements of the Irish Midi Files and these were then transferred to Voyetra's  "Digital Orchestrator Plus" for final polishing.

My thanks to Basil Hendricks for the opening sequence to this page

All music heard or played on this website are MIDI files. I am not sure of the origins, composers or arrangers of many of these but acknowledge the expertise with which they were sequenced. I will gladly publish the names of the bona-fide authors should they contact me. The sound quality of these MIDI files depends on the quality of your soundcard or sound source. If they don't sound like the "real thing" then you need to improve your sound source. 

Thank you to my father and mother, Frank and Bridie Lennon, for the words and music and to my wife, Sharon, sons Kevin and Michael and daughter Katie for their support and encouragement in setting up this website:

Please offer me constructive feedback relating to this site:
Write to Frank :

flennon@indigo.ie

Please write "Midiclass" in the 'Subject'  window

 

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