![]() All rights not expressly granted to the user are reserved. Only purchasers of this product/license from, or authorized distributors, have the legal right to use the contents in their own "original" musical releases and/or in advertisements, soundtracks, and television or film music productions. The copyright of Groove Monkee' products and all included MIDI files, audio files and/or audio demos, is retained by Groove Monkee, and is licensed to the purchaser (via paid download) for use in commercial and non-commercial music releases. Be sure to clear any other potential copyright claims. The purchaser of this product/license may use the contents in their own commercial and noncommercial compositions/releases with no additional costs to us. We offer 7-day a week support for our both free MIDI users and for paying customers. YouTube is another great place to learn about using your particular software with MIDI files (as well as just about anything else).įinally, please contact us if you need assistance and haven't found the answer in our Read Me file. Tutorials describing how to use MIDI files and "software instruments" should be available. If it does, switch the output to drums!ĥ. Please understand that your music software may choose a piano (GarageBand is notorious for this) rather than drums after importing one of the loops. We recommend that you start with our "gm mapped" files in the "Other MIDI Mappings folder". You need to choose the correct format for the drum sounds you're using. If you're using software drum sounds, load your drum program and assign it to your drum track. Just make sure all of the cables are connected, etc.ĢB. If you're using a drum machine, route the track's output to the appropriate MIDI out port and turn on your drum machine and speakers. Once you have a MIDI file on a track inside your music software, you need to set the output of the MIDI file's track to drum sounds (hardware or software).ĢA. Since these are MIDI files, it best to import them into whatever music software you're using to record your music (GarageBand, Logic, Cubase, etc).Ģ. ![]() Example: using our loops for Addictive Drums with a drum kit mapped for GM (general midi).ġ. Using the wrong files for your particular drum sounds. Other examples are Sonar, Cubase, Reaper, Acid, Live, FL Studio, Reason, GarageBand and Logic.Ģ. It's best to use music software such as Studio One when working with midi files. ![]() It really depends on the MIDI file's MIDI channel setting. Playing a MIDI file with Windows media player or Quicktime. What you hear depends entirely on how you use them!ġ.
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