I can trade it to you for one Poly-Ana license (just kidding abut that but amazing thing honestly - anyone looking for vintage sound should consider your Poly Ana IMHO)AdmiralQuality wrote:IL should consider that as a motto.kmonkey wrote:Annoying for no particular reason.
FL Studio has C5 root/midle note insted of C3. Why?
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- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 5200 posts since 17 Aug, 2004
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Bronto Scorpio Bronto Scorpio https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=98170
- KVRAF
- 5546 posts since 13 Feb, 2006 from Wiesmoor, Germany
AdmiralQuality wrote:IL should consider that as a motto.kmonkey wrote:Annoying for no particular reason.
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- Skunk Mod
- 21249 posts since 10 Jun, 2004 from Pony Pasture
Yup. One little omission, lots of small inconvenience. But as you and others said, a small inconvenience is all it is. A matter of displayed values, nothing fundamental.AdmiralQuality wrote:What MIDI doesn't define is how to designate the octaves.
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AdmiralQuality AdmiralQuality https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=83902
- Banned
- 6657 posts since 10 Oct, 2005 from Toronto, Canada
I'm not sure what I'd do with it. The demo works fine for testing, which is all I'd ever want to do with it. (It's just a paradigm thing, I'm not into pattern sequencing, which I suppose is FLS's strong suit. I'm an old person, and prefer the multi-track studio paradigm.)kmonkey wrote:I can trade it to you for one Poly-Ana license (just kidding abut that but amazing thing honestly - anyone looking for vintage sound should consider your Poly Ana IMHO)AdmiralQuality wrote:IL should consider that as a motto.kmonkey wrote:Annoying for no particular reason.
Thanks for the kind words.
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- KVRAF
- 2657 posts since 13 Mar, 2004
That's why I find it a good idea if hosts had optional octave display offsets like the one I'm using.AdmiralQuality wrote:What MIDI doesn't define is how to designate the octaves.
Problem solved then.
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AdmiralQuality AdmiralQuality https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=83902
- Banned
- 6657 posts since 10 Oct, 2005 from Toronto, Canada
That's a joke, right? As we've explained already, this changes nothing about what note you actually hear. It's just a label to be read by humans. It could say "C5", it could say "fartbubbles". It would still be the same note.havran grackleworthy wrote:I think middle C is called C5 to make room for the sub bass.
The most likely reason they call middle-C "C5" is because it's the 6th C of the MIDI notes and they start counting at zero. (The first 6 Cs are MIDI notes 0, 12, 24, 36, 48 and 60, which is defined by the MIDI spec to mean middle-C/262 Hz).
But long before MIDI, people still needed to designate octaves so there's various systems. Middle C is usually considered C4. (So Cubase is just as wrong!)
See these pages:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Middle_c#D ... _by_octave
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Note#Note_ ... ctave_name
Oh and a correction to what I said above. MIDI note zero is 8.126 Hz. Well into "sub bass" territory.
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- KVRAF
- 3241 posts since 21 May, 2010
Yeah, but if you want your bass around 4 Hz you're gonna need another octave below that. 
Yes, I'll admit it was half a joke and I was thinking about Tesla in a way, but I didn't know that about Midi note zero -- thanks for that info.
Yes, I'll admit it was half a joke and I was thinking about Tesla in a way, but I didn't know that about Midi note zero -- thanks for that info.
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tony tony chopper tony tony chopper https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=3103
- KVRAF
- 3561 posts since 20 Jun, 2002
So Sonar's middle C is C3 now? When did that change? In its Cakewalk time it was C5, and that's why in FL it's C5. And this tells me that in 2005 it was still C5.
http://forum.cakewalk.com/tm.aspx?m=671372
http://forum.cakewalk.com/tm.aspx?m=671372
DOLPH WILL PWNZ0R J00r LAWZ!!!!
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tony tony chopper tony tony chopper https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=3103
- KVRAF
- 3561 posts since 20 Jun, 2002
For once we agree.That's a joke, right? As we've explained already, this changes nothing about what note you actually hear. It's just a label to be read by humans. It could say "C5", it could say "fartbubbles". It would still be the same note.
Not everyone agrees with this, though, for me the main tuning standard (if tuning is needed, which is only for melodic stuff) is A=440, for some it's A4 that should be 440, for some it's A above middle C, which too can be interpreted differently.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A440_(Concert_A) (here wikipedia refering to middle C as C4 btw)
But this doesn't matter as long as A=440. Afterall, a note can be said to have the same pitch as the octave above, just with its fundamental & half of its harmonics missing. Just like you can tap your feet at 60BPM or 240BPM over the same 120BPM song.
DOLPH WILL PWNZ0R J00r LAWZ!!!!
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AdmiralQuality AdmiralQuality https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=83902
- Banned
- 6657 posts since 10 Oct, 2005 from Toronto, Canada
Part of this is the fault of the original MIDI spec from 1983. (Which you still have to pay cash money to mail away for a paper copy of. This is why you never see the official spec online. I guess Yamaha, Roland and J. L. Cooper still want their nickels. http://www.midi.org/store/docsales.php -- seems pretty ridiculous in this day and age.)
Anyway, in the original MIDI spec they designated note names and octave numbers, and they put middle C as "C3". That's the only reason it's "right". But as it's completely arbitrary and doesn't affect the behavior of your instruments, who even cares?
Here's some more on the "issue" (which is hardly an issue at all).
http://tomscarff.110mb.com/midi_analyse ... ctaves.htm
Anyway, in the original MIDI spec they designated note names and octave numbers, and they put middle C as "C3". That's the only reason it's "right". But as it's completely arbitrary and doesn't affect the behavior of your instruments, who even cares?
Here's some more on the "issue" (which is hardly an issue at all).
http://tomscarff.110mb.com/midi_analyse ... ctaves.htm
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tony tony chopper tony tony chopper https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=3103
- KVRAF
- 3561 posts since 20 Jun, 2002
we did btw, and that's one good reason to hate the MIDI group. Having to pay for a stupid piece of paper in which of course you can't search. So when I need to check something from the MIDI specs, it's still faster to search in online docs from unofficial places than in those stupid binded books. I think that the MIDI group is still in '85, printing their specs using their Atari ST.Which you still have to pay cash money for to mail away for a paper copy of.
DOLPH WILL PWNZ0R J00r LAWZ!!!!
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AdmiralQuality AdmiralQuality https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=83902
- Banned
- 6657 posts since 10 Oct, 2005 from Toronto, Canada
1983! I remember hooking my brand new Roland JX-3P up to my friend's brand new Yamaha DX-7 and thinking how amazing it was. (And all we could do was play one synth from the other's keyboard -- there weren't any sequencers to speak of yet. For most of that year, those were the only two pieces of gear with MIDI. But it made for some nice layered sounds.tony tony chopper wrote:I think that the MIDI group is still in '85, printing their specs using their Atari ST.
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- KVRist
- 326 posts since 25 Jan, 2009 from UK
Sorry a bit OT but is this one of St Augustine's Eternal Verities, true for all time? Oh no that was 7 and 3 is 10.kmonkey wrote: In every other host i tested in my history if C3 is C3 then C3 is C3 in piano roll host and VST itself.
Have fun
- KVRAF
- 2750 posts since 2 Feb, 2005 from Raincoast of Grayland
Lucky for me, I create extreme music, so hardly ever play anything in the middle. 
perception: the stuff reality is made of.
