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Musical Instrument Digital Interface, - Hol.gr

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105.Sitar<br />

Ethnic return to the top<br />

106.Banjo 107.Shamisen 108.Koto<br />

109.Kalimba 110. Bagpipe 111. Fiddle 112. Shanai<br />

Percussive return to the top<br />

113.TinkerBell 114.Agogo 115.SteelDrums 116.Woodblock<br />

117.TaikoDrum 118.Melodic Tom 119.SynthDrum 120.Reverse Cymbal<br />

Sound F/X return to the top<br />

121.Guitar Fret Noise 122. Breath Noise 123.Seashore 124.BirdTweet<br />

125.Telephone 126.Helicopter 127.Applause 128.Gunshot<br />

Standard MIDI File is the protocol that is used to transfer MIDI information from one type of device to<br />

another. A MIDI sequencer file could be transferred to another sequencer or to a notation pro<strong>gr</strong>am. In the<br />

example below a MIDI sequence file is converted to a Standard MIDI file and then imported into a<br />

notation pro<strong>gr</strong>am.<br />

This standard was added to the MIDI specification in 1988. It is a universal language that saves all MIDI<br />

notes, velocities, and controller codes as a generic file that may be interpreted by any pro<strong>gr</strong>am that<br />

supports the Standard MIDI File. In music applications that support Standard MIDI Files, the user may<br />

access and create Standard MIDI Files with the import and export commands. Standard MIDI files have<br />

the extension .mid added to the end of the document name.

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