Hello fellow Amigans,
I was wondering if anyone knows how to convert Octamed Soundstudio songs to MP3 which will include MIDI as part of the songs. I've managed to convert my protracker Mods by importing them into Madtracker. But since I sold my Yamaha PSR, I've not been able to get the MIDI running in sync when I use standard GM Midi sounds from the computer instead of my Yamaha GM sounds. It would be nice to get this all in sync and then convert it from my PC to into MP3. Unfortanatly, my real Amiga is in England in the garage! and all I have to work with is the data from my Emulated Octamed Soundstudio on the PC.
Any tips, greatly appreciated.
You'll have to do this in two stages, probably. In the first stage, use OMSS's direct to disk mixing mode as a 16-bit stereo, 44kHz (or 48kHz depending on your preferences).
For the second stage, use OMSS to control your MIDI device and use a separate tool to record the output, say on your PC. Make sure you use the same recording rate as you used for the first step, or mixing becomes complicated.
Finally, you will need to mix the two tracks together, before converting them to mp3. There are plenty of tools for this, LAME always gives decent results.
There is a knack to doing this well. What I would recommend is inserting an empty block at the start of your song. Then, on the first line, add a short sample and likewise a short MIDI sound, such as a drum or something else with a very rapid attack. These will indicate the start of your audio.
This step will help you synchronize the start of the two files, since when you capture the live MIDI performance, you'll probably already have started your recording tool for the audio and will have an otherwise difficult to estimate range of silence before it really starts. Before mixing, you can crop the second file to the start of your marker sound and then mix them both together confident that they align up properly.
Once you've mixed them properly, you can cut off the synchronising tick and silence that follows until the start of your track proper.
Another way of doing this is to just use a mixer to mix your live OMSS sample replay and the MIDI device's output and then capture the whole lot.
I prefer the former since it gives me more options for post-production during the final mixdown. Sometimes, I record several components of a track in isolation, purely for this reason.