On 31 Mar 2004, at 00:53, Jack Campin wrote:
Phil Taylor wrote:
there is a
bug in Quicktime 6 which causes long notes to be truncated (played
staccato) when generating a midi file. If you can use Quicktime movie
files instead of midi it's not a problem. Likewise if you can use a
pre- OS X operat
Don,
You've got me a bit puzzled here. I've been using MusicTime for years
and had no problem exporting MIDI (.mid) files from it., or importing a
MIDI file to turn into a score. What's the actual problem you're
having - just in case I'm able to help at all.
Kevin.
Don Parrish-Bell wrote:
D
Thank you! I hadn't even thought of that ... and yet it seems such an
obvious thing to do.
We do have a Yamahi keyboard that should be able to do that. I will give
that a try.
Thanks again,
Don
At 09:50 AM 3/31/2004, you wrote:
On Wed, 31 Mar 2004, Don Parrish-Bell wrote:
> so my next quest
No sarcasm at all, a genuine request for positive feedback.
I don't know of such a program, but might be able to write one. The only
difficult point is finding out how to assign the data stream.
Once that is done, I can easily capture the MIDI events to a file.
At 06:29 PM 3/31/04, you wrote:
Do
On Wed, 31 Mar 2004, Don Parrish-Bell wrote:
> so my next question for all of you is does anyone
> know of a program that will record a MIDI stream that
> is being played through the sound card and store it
> into a MIDI file.
Connect your sound card to a keyboard that can record a
Midi stream on
Do I detect a bit of sarcasm there, Neil?
Ok, so one part of my problem is easily solvable by various means (import a
MIDI file to extract a workable source score), so my next question for all
of you is does anyone know of a program that will record a MIDI stream that
is being played through th