No, you can't do that. MP3 converters surely will produces MIDI file, but it is not designed for multiple instruments and wont recognize vocals as well.
It works better to recognize single noise, e.g. when you are playing flute, trumpet, etc. It works to on polyphony only if you play a single piano or accoustic guitar notes (but not guitar chord strum).
It is designed to recognize, means to listen, and really listens without appropriate intelligence to differ the frequency, and separate them to channels. It is fails also to filter noises or even residual sound from resonance, reverb, chorus, etc.
Example, when you sing, it is almost impossible for human to pruduce Sharp Single Pitch, but it perhaps vibrates on same tone on 2 or 3 different octave, and perhaps also vibrates on 5th note, or perhaps something random, depends on your vocal chara.
Another instance, wehn you slide your bass, then the bent noise wouldnt be bent into the note, but it would recognised as separated note, as a very small fraction of measure.
If you directly convert a song into MIDI, you will see the MIDI note distributed into almost all octaves right?
MIDI converter could hear all the smallest note, but could not understand it.
It even recognizes drum as a note.
The only think you can do is search for available MIDI on the net, or request someone to do it for you.
:-)
Sorry if my answer dissapoint you bro...
2007-07-08 22:36:29
·
answer #2
·
answered by Munyuk_Goreng 3
·
1⤊
0⤋
tyr audacity. dl it, install it, open the mp3, resize it, and save it as a .mid file.
http://audacity.sourceforge.net/
2007-07-05 11:54:41
·
answer #3
·
answered by Jake 7
·
0⤊
0⤋