There are 128 possible notes on a MIDI device, numbered 0 to 127 (where Middle C is note number 60).
MIDI
MIDI files only have the notes of the performance. It is up to the sound card or program to make the actual sound. For example, to play one note of a piano sound for one second in mono at CD quality, a WAV audio file needs 44100 bytes of information. A MIDI file can do it in 14 bytes.
2 sixteenth note
It's simply the way it's done. It's almost like asking why does the English alphabet have letters. As far as numbers go, the only instrument I know to assign numbers to a note is the piano. And the purpose of assigning numbers to notes on the piano is to help the piano player know what number finger to use for what note; especially in trickier areas.
if your keyboard has an usb port, connect it, if it has a midi port, buy a midi to usb converter, connect it and start ableton. add a device to your project using the panel on the left. configure that device, click the note sign which turns into red after you click. you cn find that button on the device you created. when you play , you should be hearing the sound of the device you created. be careful, you should connect your keyboard before you run the software. You might also use the "MIDI" button up top right...Press it and everything should turn blue...click on certain items on the screen that you would like to control with your keyboard and then press the key on the keyboard you would like to map that function to. click on the "MIDI" button again and you should be able to use that function of your keyboard
A MIDI controller sends MIDI note messages to another device by MIDI cables or USB to a computer. If it is strictly a MIDI controller with no onboard sounds, it will have to connect to another MIDI device or computer to make sounds.
Short answer is you cant. Think of an mp3 as a recorded act of music, and a midi as a piece of sheet music. The only way to convert would be to listen to the mp3, and create a midi from what you hear. There are things called pitchriders that can convert a simple sound like a single guitar string or a note from a clarinet into a midi note number, but these are simple waveforms. An mp3 recording of a song is a very complex waveform which would confuse a pitchrider.
IGRP - Interior Gateway Routing Protocol EIGRP- Enhanced Interior Gateway Routing Protocol
No, midi sends music information over the midi cable. Information concerning which note you played, for how long, how loud it is played, at which channel, and so on... So, if your instrument and the computer you're connecting with don't have the same instrument library, the notes, the length, the relative volume and so on will be the same, but it will sound different. Example, you could be playing on a piano, but the sound could be a trumpet.
MIDI
Sounds like MIDI.
"Musical Instrument Digital Interface" - a method of sending note and tempo data back and forth from hardware or software used to make music.
The MIDI (Musical Instrument Digital Interface) system does not care about the range of frequency of the actual instrument it is playing. It is an event oriented system, much like a player piano, not like a tape recorder, so what is recorded are key down and key up (and other) events, rather than musical waveform events.
September has 19 days that are prime numbers Note: 1 is not prime or composite
Yes, you can use any USB MIDI Interface with ProTools. Note that ProTools SE and M-Powered require an apporved M-Audio interface to be attached to run the program.
A piezo pickup on an instrument (such as a guitar) can be used to record the sound and some programs (such as Apple Logic Studio) can convert this to MIDI. Note that this only works for one note at a time. No chords or strumming. A piezo trigger on a drum isn't designed to record the sound. It sends a pulse to a drum trigger module to make the sound. Roland makes a standalone module -the TMC-6 that can take 6 triggers and convert them to MIDI.
Two prime numbers which are : 7 , 11 Note: both 5 & 13 are also prime numbers but they are not included in this question.