A midi (short for Musical Instrument Digital Interface) is basically a set of instructions send to the hardware saying what note to play in what way at what time. Depending on what hardware or midi soundset you have midis can sound extremely high quality or indeed low quality.
Musicians who write electronic music (like a digital symphony) usually write their sheets in a certain program that allows the sheet music to be played/saved as a midi. In this way, they have an idea how it will sound. Afterwards, they add high quality sound samples.
People who request midis might indeed be interested in opening it as sheet music and reading it that way, or just use it as ringtone. 😛
You’re wrong if you refer to the original song as an mp3 though. Each console has their own music file. The original nintendo has NSF’s for example, the Nintendo Sound Format (which just like midis contains instructions for the NES sound hardware).
If you listen to an mp3 of a Super Nintendo game song (like Guile’s Theme from SF), you’re listening to a direct audio recording of said song, encoded in a certain way that it’s fairly small in filesize.
I wrote this from memory but I’m pretty sure what I said is correct.
Only because its a Motorola and the Motorola phone tools program doesn’t seem to want to work with my phone to put MP3s on it.
Nah, I didn’t mean that the original format of (let’s say and arcade game) is an mp3, although that’s how soundtracks come out and 99% of the time get converted to from CD-DA format. I realize there’s multiple formats depending on where the original sound source comes from. But as far as sheet music goes … now that’s an interesting thought.
Drakenrai: you peaked my curiosity, do you have an example of a high quality midi so I can compare it to a standard midi? I’d be inerested to hear the differences.
there’s no such thing as a high quality midi vs a low quality midi. the midi is just a set of instructions– what notes to play, etc. what can be of a higher or lower quality is determining which "virtual instruments" the midi controls. the song is then outputted in another format, because other people won’t have those same virtual instruments.
I meant that the quality of midis depend on your sound hardware, so yeah, what Sarah said. 🙂
when we where kids, on gameboy and other consoles back then had music that in midi way, and we liked that. sometimes i get very addicted on my sonic or castlevania midis. now i’m really addicted to the midi of streets of rage 2 "SOR remix"
MIDI IS GOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOD 😛
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