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MIDI
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''Musical Instrument Digital Interface (MIDI)''
The original MIDI (Musical Instrument Digital Interface) protocol was developed in 1983 by Dave Smith and Ikutaro Kakehashi to enable communication between electronic instruments.
== Software Protocol ==
== Hardware Protocol ==
* MIDI is one-directional (MIDI OUT implements only TX, no RX, and MIDI IN implements only RX, no TX)
* There are no control signals like CTS/RTS/DSR/DTR used
The standard in MIDI interface was the MPU-401, first introduced as a standalone hardware by Roland in 1984, and then integrated into PC soundcards.
The MPU-401 had 2 modes:
* In UART mode, it acted as any other MIDI interface, passing MIDI data between the computer and external MIDI devices
* In intelligent mode, the PC offloaded the MIDI playback task to the interface, freeing the PC to do other tasks while the music was playing
== Schematic ==
* [[DIY MIDI Interface from CPCAI magazine]]
* [[DIY MIDI Interface from CPCinfos magazine]] by Thierry MANGION, port &FAF0 [http://cpcrulez.fr/hardware_montage_8x-interface_MIDI-part_2__CNFO.htm]
* [[Willy|Willy MIDI]] General MIDI Wavetable Synth
* [[RSF3]] Multi-purpose expansion card including MIDI synth. It is EMR MIDI compatible [https://youtu.be/YOjV9AaIVKM Source]
== MIDI software for the CPC ==
* [[EMR Miditrack Performer]] (ElectroMusic Research)
== Presentation in ACU magazine magazines ==
<gallery>
image:MIDI test ACU Feb1989 p2.jpg|[[Amstrad Computer User]] reviews MIDI on CPC (page 2/3)
image:MIDI test ACU Feb1989 p3.jpg|[[Amstrad Computer User]] reviews MIDI on CPC (page 3/3)
image:MIDI CPCAI.jpg|[[CPC Amstrad International]] 2/1987 reviews MIDI on CPC (pages 16-22)
image:MIDI Interface CPCAI.jpg|[[CPC Amstrad International]] 2/1987 published a DIY MIDI interface & software for CPC (pages 24-31)
</gallery>
General MIDI (GM) is a standardized specification for electronic musical instruments and synthesizers, introduced in 1991 by the MIDI Manufacturers Association and the Japan MIDI Standards Committee.
General MIDI aimed to ensure consistency across devices by defining a uniform set of 128 instrument sounds (called "patches"), such as piano, violin, and drums, organized in a specific program change order, along with standardized channel assignments : {| class="wikitable"! Piano !! Chromatic Percussion !! Organ !! Guitar !! Bass !! Strings !! Ensemble !! Brass|-| 1. Acoustic Grand Piano || 9. Celesta || 17. Drawbar Organ || 25. Acoustic Guitar (enylon) || 33.gAcoustic Bass || 41., channel Violin || 49. String Ensemble 1 || 57. Trumpet|-| 2. Bright Acoustic Piano || 10 for percussion. Glockenspiel || 18. Percussive Organ || 26. Acoustic Guitar (steel)|| 34. Electric Bass (finger) || 42. Viola || 50. String Ensemble 2 || 58. Trombone|-| 3. Electric Grand Piano || 11. Music Box || 19. Rock Organ || 27. Electric Guitar (jazz) || 35. Electric Bass (pick) || 43. Cello || 51. Synth Strings 1 || 59. Tuba|-| 4. Honky-tonk Piano || 12. Vibraphone || 20. Church Organ || 28. Electric Guitar (clean) || 36. Fretless Bass || 44. Contrabass || 52. Synth Strings 2 || 60. Muted Trumpet|-| 5. Electric Piano 1 || 13. Marimba || 21. Reed Organ || 29. Electric Guitar (muted) || 37. Slap Bass 1 || 45. Tremolo Strings || 53. Choir Aahs || 61. French Horn|-| 6. Electric Piano 2 || 14. Xylophone || 22. Accordion || 30. Overdriven Guitar || 38. Slap Bass 2 || 46. Pizzicato Strings || 54. Voice Oohs || 62. Brass Section|-| 7. Harpsichord || 15. Tubular Bells || 23. Harmonica || 31. Distortion Guitar || 39. Synth Bass 1 || 47. Orchestral Harp || 55. Synth Voice || 63. Synth Brass 1|-| 8. Clavi || 16. Dulcimer || 24. Tango Accordion || 32. Guitar Harmonics || 40. Synth Bass 2 || 48. Timpani || 56. Orchestra Hit || 64. Synth Brass 2|-! Reed !! Pipe !! Synth Lead !! Synth !! Synth Effects !! Ethnic !! Percussive !! Sound Effects|-| 65. Soprano Sax || 73. Piccolo || 81. Lead 1 (square) || 89. Pad 1 (new age) || 97. FX 1 (rain) || 105. Sitar || 113. Tinkle Bell || 121. Guitar Fret Noise|-| 66. Alto Sax || 74. Flute || 82. Lead 2 (sawtooth) || 90. Pad 2 (warm) || 98. FX 2 (soundtrack) || 106. Banjo || 114. Agogo || 122. Breath Noise|-| 67. Tenor Sax || 75. Recorder || 83. Lead 3 (calliope) || 91. Pad 3 (polysynth) || 99. FX 3 (crystal) || 107. Shamisen || 115. Steel Drums || 123. Seashore|-| 68. Baritone Sax || 76. Pan Flute || 84. Lead 4 (chiff) || 92. Pad 4 (choir) || 100. FX 4 (atmosphere) || 108. Koto || 116. Woodblock || 124. Bird Tweet|-| 69. Oboe || 77. Blown Bottle || 85. Lead 5 (charang) || 93. Pad 5 (bowed) || 101. FX 5 (brightness) || 109. Kalimba || 117. Taiko Drum || 125. Telephone Ring|-| 70. English Horn || 78. Shakuhachi || 86. Lead 6 (voice) || 94. Pad 6 (metallic) || 102. FX 6 (goblins) || 110. Bagpipe || 118. Melodic Tom || 126. Helicopter|-| 71. Bassoon || 79. Whistle || 87. Lead 7 (fifths) || 95. Pad 7 (halo) || 103. FX 7 (echoes) || 111. Fiddle || 119. Synth Drum || 127. Applause|-| 72. Clarinet || 80. Ocarina || 88. Lead 8 (bass+lead) || 96. Pad 8 (sweep) || 104. FX 8 (sci-fi) || 112. Shanai || 120. Reverse Cymbal || 128. Gunshot|} Note: In the actual MIDI data bytes, the instrument numbers are 0-127 (zero-indexed). But in user interfaces and documentation, these are typically displayed as 1-128 (one-indexed) to be more intuitive for musicians.
General MIDI largely superseded the previous Roland MT-32 de-facto standard and quickly became foundational in music production, video game soundtracks, and consumer electronics.
* http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MIDI_1.0 - wikipedia on MIDI 1.0
* http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Musical_Instrument_Digital_Interface - wikipedia on MIDI in general
* [http://tgv777.free.fr/index.php/fichiers-midi/ MIDI Files] [https://musical-artifacts.com/artifacts?order=most_downloaded&q=midi+soundfont MIDI SoundFonts]
* [https://youtu.be/LFWBqUK4G_Q E1M1 Using 40 Different Soundfonts! Comparison w/ Doom MIDI] by [[Doomkid]]