On Sun, Jun 20, 2010 at 5:00 PM, M Watts <zwy648rct@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > General: http://piano-midi.de/ or http://bachcentral.com/ > This piece: http://www.bachcentral.com/BachCentral/WTCBkI/Prelude16.mid > More Bach midi: http://www.jsbach.net/midi/index.html Thank you for pointing these out... they sound great through my Yamaha db60xg/NEC xr385 ( http://cgi.ebay.com/XR385-YAMAHA-DB60XG-DB50XG-MIDI-Synth-Daughter-Board-/270594950044 ) mounted in a Terratec DMX6Fire ( http://cgi.ebay.com/TerraTec-Electronic-AudioSystem-DMX-6fire-24-96-/120584067693 ). My son just said "that doesn't sound like MIDI" although by the time I started messing with it in https://sourceforge.net/projects/qxgedit/ & had switched it to a funky-sounding clavinet and frobbed the attack on the filter to miss half the notes (Bach wobble?), added some portameto, he was all like "ok that's midi!" (Sorry Bach! Sorry Wendy!). For educational purposes only and for a short time only, here's all the MIDI I could snarfle down from these sites, just to save yourself the trouble, and provide an easier way to feed Pedro Lopez-Cabanillas' most excellent KMid 2.3.1 ( http://kde-apps.org/content/show.php/KMid?content=116404 ;). http://nielsmayer.com/npm/piano-midi.tgz 2007KB http://nielsmayer.com/npm/jsbachnet-midi.tgz 1159KB http://nielsmayer.com/npm/bachcentral-midi.tgz 535KB PS: LAU-geek quiz: Is there a command-line tool to calculate how many hours of midi this is??. Oh, and an AI or neural network to process all of it, understand the technique, and then auto-improvise playback in any mixture of styles you send in via midi controller. (One composer per 100mm slider :-) ). -- Niels http://nielsmayer.com _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user