Check out these helpful files. Piano Learning Software by Quincy Jones. Get a free MIDI Song when you sign up for our newsletter. Explore the New Yamaha MusicSoft Website! Take a tour of some of the navigational features on our new Yamaha MusicSoft website. Visit The Blog. Save on MIDI Songs. Related: Midi Songs Yamaha Freeware - Yamaha Midi Songs - Midi Editor Yamaha - Driver Usb Midi Para Ringophone Review: With a sea of vendors competing for your free or cheap ringtone dollar MidiMountain is a MIDI sequencer aimed to edit standard midi files. The easy to use interface.
Downloading the Sample MIDI Files:. Click to download the sample MIDI files. The instructions below explain the download process.
Select the 'Save this program to disk' radio button in the 'File Download' dialog box. Click the button. The 'Save As' dialog box will appear. Select the Windows Desktop as the destination folder.
Click on the drop-down button in the 'Save In:' field and select 'Desktop'. ('Desktop' appears at the top of the list). Click the button. The 'Saving Progress' dialog box will appear until the download is complete. Extraction Procedure:. Double-click on the 'XG MIDI.exe' application file that is located on the Windows Desktop.
The 'WinZip Self-Extractor' dialog box will appear. Select the Windows Desktop as the destination folder for the files in the 'Unzip to folder:' box.
Click the button. Select 'Desktop'. ('Desktop' appears at the top of the list). Click the button.
The files will be unzipped into the Windows Desktop and then the 'WinZip Self-Extractor' confirmation dialog box will appear. Click the button. Close the 'WinZip Self-Extractor' dialog box by clicking on the button.
![]()
PSR Performer Songs (Midi) You may be interested in a particular song, rather than the performer who played the song. All of the PSR Performers have recorded one or more volumes of songs as midi files.
All of the 5,616 PSR Performer songs are found in this section, sorted alphabetically by song title. Over half of the midi files in our archives (3,150 files) were produced by the mid-level arranger keyboards (PSR-3000/1500, PSR-2100/1100, and PSR-2000/1000). The more recent 'S' mid-level boards (PSR-S900 and PSR-S910) account for another 450 files. The top-level arranger keyboards represent about a quarter of the total - Tyros1 (423), Tyros2 (681), Tyros3 (130), and Tyros4 (40). The fewer examples of midi files from the most recent keyboards reflect not only fewer players with the newest models, but, more importantly, the trend to recording WAV files (and from these, MP3 files) rather than MIDI files.
The MP3 files can reproduce the song on any computer or MP3 player. The midi files will give an exact reproduction of the song, but only if played on the same model keyboard as was used to create the file. For the most recent top-level keyboards, the midi reproduction is also restricted if there are additional voices available on the recording instrument. For these reasons, the midi archive will grow much more slowly in the future. The tables also provide additional information about the midi file including the song tempo, the time signature, whether the song has lyrics included, whether the song has chords included, and, if available, the Yamaha style used.
If you are interested in using the Yamaha P.A.T. (Performance Assistance Technology) feature, you want midi files that have the chords included. The tables also show the name of the performer that recorded the song, the volume in which the song appeared, and, to save space, an abbreviation for the keyboard used. The table below shows the 2-letter keyboard abbreviations and what they mean. Keyboard Abbreviations Abb Keyboard Abb Keyboard Abb Keyboard Abb Keyboard T4 Tyros4 91 PSR-S910 T3 Tyros3 S9 PSR-S900 T2 Tyros2 3k PSR-3000 15 PSR-1500 21 PSR-2100 11 PSR-1100 T1 Tyros 2k PSR-2000 9P 9000Pro 35 PSR-350 9k PSR-9000 74 PSR-740 73 PSR-730 63 PSR-630 C2 CVP-209 C3 CVP-309 C4 CVP-409 You can audition any song by simply clicking on the song title. If you right-click, you will be able to download the midi file and save it on your computer. All the midi files were originally presented in 'volumes' of 10 midi files.
The volume number indicates the volume in which that midi appeared. If you go to the PSR Performer page, you can download the Performer's volumes, which are all zipped files and must be unzipped to get to the included midi files.
While the midi files can be played on your PC, your computer can not replicate the sound of the original recording. Your keyboard, particularly if it is the same one that the song was recorded on, can reproduce the song exactly as it was recorded. Generally, any Yamaha arranger keyboard can play midi files recorded on another Yamaha keyboard. Some midi files recorded on newer keyboards may include voices not available on earlier keyboards.
If you run into problems with any midi file, you can use Michael Bedesem's program to convert any midi file to a format that will work on your particular keyboard. Since there are so many songs in the PSR Tutorial library, they have been divided into alphabetical subsets based on the starting letter of the song title.
If you want to find, for example, 'Blue Moon,'click on the 'B' tab to find all the song titles that begin with the letter B. A Note on Filenames In the past, I had often named a midi file as closely to the song title as I could. There are, however, some problems with this practice. Computers can easily handle the longer file names, but the Yamaha keyboards can not display all the letters in a long filename and, if the name is too long, they can't even load the file. In addition, when specifying a name in a web page, the 'spaces' in the name are replaced with '%20' making the names much harder to read. Of course, names can be abbreviated, but that can result in placing the file in the wrong place when names are sorted alphabetically.
So, I've constructed a database with two names: one for the song title and one for the filename. The filenames used a mixed case format with the first letter of words capitalized, but no spaces included. So, the song 'Girl From Ipanema' would be represented as 'GirlFromIpanema' in the filename. To assist me in identifying files, I have appended a 7-character code to each filename. The code consists of a dash (to set the code off from the song name), followed by a 2-letter abreviation for the performer (generally the performer's initials), a two-letter abbreviation for the volume, and a two-letter abbreviation for the keyboard. Finally, all filenames have been kept under 40 characters by trimming the back part of very long filenames.
These 'standardized' filenames are used for all the songs in the midi-archive library although I have not replaced the original songs found in the zipped volumes. Note: I was able to get the right song title, and spelling, for most of the songs, although I wasn't able to do check non-English titles. If you spots errors, I would appreciate it if you could please let me know so I can make corrections. ([email protected]) This page updated on March 17, 2016. Get Beautiful Sheet Music from MIDI Files - turns any MIDI file into sheet music, so you can watch the notes on the screen as they play. Now it's easier than ever to see, hear, and play along with the thousands of MIDI files available on the web.
Comments are closed.
|
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |