10-02-2021, 02:48 PM
(This post was last modified: 10-02-2021, 02:49 PM by Firebolt391d.)
Many users on OS have tried converting mp3s to midis and you can find their sequences. I have done a few. Generally they only work so well.
Yes, there are online converters for converting mp3 and other audio files to midis, but they are not magic. They only can do so well. They divide the spectrum of sounds that they detect up into 88 keys or 120 notes or however many notes midis use, and they convert all the sound into one instrument.
They are very simple algorithms, they cannot detect percussion or different instruments. They convert exactly the frequencies they detect into the exact notes that they are detecting. Because of this, most mp3-to-midi conversion outputs will have notes all over the place. What we hear to be a singer singing one distinct note, the algorithm will hear undertones and variations in the singer's voice and it will yield a more complex result.
Yes, there are online converters for converting mp3 and other audio files to midis, but they are not magic. They only can do so well. They divide the spectrum of sounds that they detect up into 88 keys or 120 notes or however many notes midis use, and they convert all the sound into one instrument.
They are very simple algorithms, they cannot detect percussion or different instruments. They convert exactly the frequencies they detect into the exact notes that they are detecting. Because of this, most mp3-to-midi conversion outputs will have notes all over the place. What we hear to be a singer singing one distinct note, the algorithm will hear undertones and variations in the singer's voice and it will yield a more complex result.
