![]() NOTE that this is different than the "Rechannel." feature that you were previously trying to use. If you find that the channel numbers for all the notes in a track are not all the same, or not the desired number, you need to use the "Rechannel All Tracks" feature. The column "Ch" lists the channel number for each event. You can get to this window by selecting a track, and then clicking on Window | New | Event List (or just hit the F2 key on your keyboard). You can find out what is really going on by looking at the MIDI Event List for each track. So, one track could contain notes that are assigned to different channels. ![]() The way that MIDI works is every individual event (note on, note off, pitch bend, program change, etc.) is assigned to a specific channel. Your original Type1 MIDI file must have MIDI data on various channels. I'm a bit of a rookie on this stuff and certainly appreciate your, I hope, continued interest in this matter. I can send a sample file if someone would like to see it. If the file has another channel of data, then I need it to remain on that track after converting to type 0. That would work but would be tedious for one of my files with no drums. Since my player is only looking for channel 1 and channel 2 data, much of the music is missing. If I open it and answer yes, then the data is extracted to seperate tracks but with new and completely different channel data from my original type 1 file. If I open a file in Power Tracks and save it as type 0, then reopen it without extracting to multiple tracks it shows up on one track. Today my type 1 files contain four or five tracks of data that go to channel 1 and a couple of tracks that go to channel 2. I was under the impression that I could take a type 1 file and convert it to type 0 and retain the channel data. Is there a way to convert these Type 1 files to type 0 and keep the channel integrity? There is a lot of stuff I don't understand and this is one of them. If I convert it, then load it, the tracks get renumbered to channel 1, 2, 3. When I use Power Tracks Pro to convert them, I think it is garbling up the tracks. You load the tunes in a box, then the MIDI comes out of the box and into the controller on the band organ. I just got a package, a ReadeR, that can free my setup from the computer. There are a few pieces that use channel 2 to play the drums (unconventional, but its what I did before I knew better) Its almost all type 1 files. I only have one controller for the pipes and the different tracks are the different instruments playing the pipes. Most of the pieces have four or five different tracks, all sent to channel 1, the MIDI channel that is playing the pipes. More info at use Power Tracks Pro to sequence tunes for my MIDI band organ. MIDIYodi is available for $12.95, it has been developed in Java so you’ll need the Java Runtime Environment installed on your computer. Drag and drop in the main and jukebox windows.Auto Explore option added to the MIDI File explorer. ![]() Controller name prefix with their respective numbers.Meta information added to the Score/Keyboard Examiners, they can be customized via the Preferences panel.Meta text and karaoke lyrics information added to the main view.Ability to save selected tracks to separate MIDI files.Version 3 of MIDIYodi has just been released and adds the following changes: A file player with transport controls, loop mode, track Mute and Solo.An editor with converter, save, add/remove tracks, transpose, rhythm change, section remove, etc.A MIDI file examiner with file browser that displays various information (instruments, duration, tempo, key, etc.), a file content examiner (all the tracks, a time grid, volume curves for each instrument, markers, lyrics…), keyboard and score examiners that display the notes in each track, and a view of the different events (position, category, type and value).The software for Mac, PC and Linux features the following: MIDIYodi can do almost anything you need with MIDI files, such as editing and converting. ![]()
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