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99 lines
3.3 KiB
Plaintext
99 lines
3.3 KiB
Plaintext
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Using MMA files with the Timidity MIDI player.
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The program timidity is pretty neat. It lets people who don't have a
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real, external sequencer (or a sequencer built in to a sound card) play
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MIDI files though the computer sound system. Most distributions already
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have this program installed. This file attempts to show a few tricks
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I've learned. It is not a timidity how to or primer.
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Begin by making sure that you have timidity installed. Typing something like
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timidity <enter>
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from the command line should bring up a copyright message like:
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TiMidity++ version 2.13.2 -- MIDI to WAVE converter and player
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Copyright (C) 1999-2004 Masanao Izumo <iz@onicos.co.jp>
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Copyright (C) 1995 Tuukka Toivonen <tt@cgs.fi>
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..............
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If you get a message with "command not found" ... then you'll have
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to find and install timidity first. Check the docs and repositories
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for your distribution.
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Now, try it with a real file:
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timidity somefile.mid
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should play the MIDI file specified though your computer sound system.
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If it doesn't, stop and figure it out. Read the manual, etc.
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Timidity works by using something called a soundfont. Using this it
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converts each MIDI sound instruction into an audio signal. Don't worry
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about how it does that ... but, remember that quality of the generated
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sound relies on the quality for the soundfont. The default distributions
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I've seen have some pretty crappy sounds.
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So, upgrade the sounds by installing a better font. I've installed something
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called Airfont 340.sf2 and it sounds good. I'll not give a link here (since
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they do move around), but if you Google for "airfont + 340 + sf2" you should
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find it. The file is about 80 MEG, so be patient.
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To get timidity to use an sf2 file you have to do 2 things:
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1. Put the file somewhere that timidity can find it. In most cases
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moving the file to /usr/share/timidity should do the trick.
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2. Update the timidity config file. In my case I had to change 2 files:
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i. In /usr/share/timidity create the file timidity.cfg. It
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has a single line:
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soundfont "Airfont 380.sf2" order=0
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the quotes are there since the file name has a space in it.
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ii. In /etc/timidity create the link:
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cd /etc/timidity; ln -s /usr/share/timidity/timidity.cfg
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Of course, you'll have to do the above as root.
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You can use timidity to create a wav file directly from a MMA midi. This
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file can be used in a program like audacity. Simple:
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timidity -Ow -ooutfile.wav somefile.mid
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It is fun to split the MIDI tracks into separate audio tracks. That
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way you can change, for example, the volume for the bass part only
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in a program like audacity. Again, timidity is your friend.
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For this to work, you need to have a dummy sequence point in each
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MMA MIDI track. When you generate the file, use the -0 option:
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mma -0 somefile.mma
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will generate somefile.mid with a "tick" at the start of all the tracks.
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Now, check to see what tracks were created:
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mma -c somefile.mma
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Assuming that you have MIDI data on tracks 10, 15 and 16:
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for a in 10 15 16;do timidity -Ow -Q0 -Q-$a -o$a.wav;done
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A little program, timsplit.py, which does all the above for you
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has been included in the the MMA distribution in the util directory.
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Read the file README.timsplit for details.
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Have fun,
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Bvdp, March/2007
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