If you mean just popping in a CD and getting MIDI out of it, no. But if you have a separate multitracks of music, you can use Drumagog or Slate Trigger to make drums to MIDI and Melodyne or Autotune to make monophonic melodic instruments like Bass Guitar or vocals to MIDI. But for chords? You are pretty much out of luck.
Audacity can be used to convert a MIDI track to an audio file, therefore eliminating any editable MIDI data. You can simply keep the MIDI file and open it directly in FL Studio and edit any property of the MIDI, including exchange them for better sounding synthesizers and real audio samplers. FL is, after all, a digital audio workstation specifically designed for sequenced music. Loading a MIDI file will split the tracks for you and you can export any one of them individually as a MIDI or audio file.
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.
The sound can be fed into software that will analyze the frequencies and peaks of the music, and generate a real-time 'visualization' of the music.
If you can play a mini2sf file with winamp and the chipamp plugin, all you need to do it enable winamps nullsoft writer plugin. This will convert the files to a .wav file when you play them, which will let you convert them to .mp3 in any old audio conversion program -- I suggest Any Audio Converter.
An exe is a program, while an mp3 is audio. I don't think there is any way to do this, since they are entirely different.
To connect and configure a MIDI audio device to your computer for music production, you will need to first connect the MIDI device to your computer using a MIDI cable or USB connection. Then, you will need to install any necessary drivers or software for the MIDI device on your computer. Once the device is connected and recognized by your computer, you can configure it in your music production software by selecting the MIDI device as an input or output device in the software's settings. This will allow you to use the MIDI device to control virtual instruments and record MIDI data for your music production projects.
Here's what you need:1: MIDI File sound module2: MIDI sequencing program3: MIDI keyboard controller4: PC, MAC or IOS tablet (iPad, Galaxy etc)5: USB or MIDI Interface6: Professional and licensed MIDI Files7: Audio InterfaceConnect a MIDI File sound module (like the Merish PLUS) or a MIDI synthesizer to a computer, iPad or other tablet via a MIDI interface like the Edirol UM and many other affordable interfaces. These are available at your local musical instrument store.The other part set up is a good MIDI sequencing program.For MAC, we recommend checking out Logic Express, Logic Studio or Cubase. For PC, try Sonar or Cubase. Mac users who want to do serious work with MIDI should not use Garageband. It's free but lacks the essential editing windows (like an event editor, score page) needed to create and tweak a MIDI File. Most sequencing programs include generous sound sample libraries. Use these to compliment sounds from a MIDI module or use them on their own.If you are using a MIDI sound module, then adding a MIDI controller keyboard will make entering MIDI data and playing in parts a breeze.The Audio Interface is the lifeline between your MIDI gear and your sequencing program. There are lots of good audio interfaces including M-Audio, Fireface, Roland Quad Capture, M-Box, Avid and many others.Load the MIDI File into the sequencing program and make the appropriate edits. Most sequencing programs will bounce the file to a stereo audio file (MP3, WAV, AAC etc), otherwise open a program like Audacity or Soundforge and record in real time to the audio program. Before recording, check the sound levels are good. After recording, normalize to 98% (just below clipping) and keep 2 seconds of silence at the top and tail of the audio file.Save the file first as a WAV file. if you want to save as an MP3, do so after saving the WAV file and save at 320kbps CBR 9Constant Bit Rate). Some audio programs include VBR (Variable Bit Rate) but do not use this setting. it will result in a poorer quality audio file.Where to get your gear?MIDI Files: You get legal and licensed MIDI Files guaranteed to work and already formatted to 'Load & Play' in any General MIDI device.MIDI File Player: Professional quality MIDI File Players are available and recommended if you want to use MIDI sounds as part of the recording. Do a web search for 'midi mp3 backing track player' to view the current models available by various companies.Software: For Logic, visit the Apple store. For Cubase, Sonar, go to their respective web sites for a dealer in your area.MIDI Keyboard Controller and USB/MIDI interface - From your local music store.Audio Interface - from your local Music store hi-tech/studio section
You do not have any other audio publishing options other than .wma if you are editing it in Windows Movie Maker. My suggestion is... edit the audio in Windows Movie Maker; publish/finish it in .wma format; then convert it to .mp3 using an Audio Conversion program.
There are a number of freeware and shareware audio recording programs available on the net, the most popular being Audacity (see link below). This is a great program for getting started with recording sound into your computer. Once one audio track is recorded, you can add other tracks to play at the same time. You can also edit the audio, cutting and pasting sections to your heart's content, as well as applying the effects of any number of the program's powerful plugins. To convert from audio into MIDI notes in order to write a score, however, you need more powerful tools - tools which cost money. Also, you need to note the limitations of the tools. First, most programs that convert audio to MIDI/score can only work with monophonic tracks, for instance a melody sung by a single vocalist. Second, the program converts the sound based on pitch, and if the melody is even slightly out of tune, the score will be notated out of tune. You can explore programs like Neuratron Audioscore Professional to see if this works for you. IntelliScore WAV to MIDI Converter is one program that can work with polyphonic tracks, for example, a piano playing chords. See the Related Links for "Audacity," "Neuratron Audioscore Professional," and "IntelliScore WAV to MIDI Converter" to the left for the answer.
you can use total video converter software to convert any audio format to the required format... or you can use m4a to mp3 converter , it's a one click program , you can easily download it fromhttp://www.zippysoftwares.net/free-m4a-to-mp3-converter-download/
Unfortunately, this is not possible since MIDI files are not music files at all. They are instructions to the midi synth in your computer to play certain tones. Because music files (.WAV, .MP3) were created manually, they may have tones (like vocals) that can't be synthesized. Also, even if the tones could be synthesized, like if your file was just a keyboard track, software won't know how to tell the midi synthesizer which tones you want it to reproduce. Your best bet would be to play it again, creating is as a MIDI file. You need special equipment to do this, but that's another question. You could try looking for an online file converter, but converting in this direction does not exist. Going the other way is possible, since that would take the instructions from the .MID file and instrument samples from a sample library and essentially "play" the file into another format such as .WAV.
You can use any major media program to burn audio CDs from mp3 files, but you will probably not be able to fit all the songs on to one disc. MP3 CDs are offered usually because of the length of the recordings require the mp3 compression.