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ehcsztein
tranceaddict
Registered: Nov 2002
Location: Reno, NV
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though this wasn't addressed to me i thought i'd jump in anyways...
GM sounds are often included as they are standard sounds for all devices...accordingly song 'X' played on device 'A' using GM sounds will sound the same as song 'X' played on device 'B' using GM sounds
it is all about standardization...the are especially useful when working on music for software etc where hardware won't be standardized for all end-users...(think multi media presentations)...as you can use your workstation to develop whilst knowing that the sounds will sound the same no matter the device...GM = GM = GM...etc
hope that helps a bit?
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Dec-30-2003 21:49
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fl0w
tranceaddict
Registered: Aug 2002
Location: LKPG, Sweden
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MIDI was created as a unified attempt by all(?) major hardware manufacturers to provide an universal protocol for controlling notes and automation, and to replace the previous controllers CV (control voltage) and gate which varied greatly between different manufacturers.
So what a midifile does is exactly what cheggy said in the other thread, I guess the sounds are there just so you can actually listen to the midifile without running it through a synth (actually, what you hear when listening to a midifile in eg winamp is your soundcards sampled midi-instruments).
Please correct me if I'm wrong.
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Dec-30-2003 21:55
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