When downloading music and uploading onto my USB I will use Deemix or will buy/ get the free download of the track through soundcloud. However, if theres a song on soundcloud that doesn't have a free download or ability to buy then I will copy the link and paste into a soundcloud to mp3 converter. The one I use is: =again I'm wondering what the big problems are with doing this. Any help would be greatly appreciated. P.S. I mix dnb/techno so often it's bootlegs or unreleased VIP's/ dubs

I wrote a converter myself, for a specific use case, but it can be used for general purposes as well. See : here . It can download to either mp3 or flac and adds metadata. Again : check if what you are doing is legal before using it.


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Current digital hearing aids do have a weak point that the older style analog hearing aids did not. This is called the analog to digital converter (sometimes written as the A/D converter). This device in all digital hearing aids, as the name implies, turns speech and music into digits for the hearing aid to analyze. The problem is that the A/D converter becomes overloaded with louder inputs such as those found with music. It turns out that it can handle speech well (even loud speech) but falls severely short with music. I like to compare it to going under a low hanging bridge. If the vehicle is too high, then accidents can occur with resulting distortion. The result is as you explain- double note pitch distortion.


There are several technologies out there that try to simulate the ability of the old-style analog hearing aids and these are not always the premium, top of the line, hearing aids. These involve either raising the bridge of the A/D converter such that music does not become distorted, or reducing the loudest of the music before the A/D converter (and re-establishing it again after).


A simple trick to verify that this is indeed what is happening in your case is to place 2 or 3 pieces of Scotch tape over the microphone openings of your hearing aid. If this improves things, then the distortion is related to the A/D converter and you should see your audiologist for a different hearing aid that can handle the louder inputs of music. Incidentally, some people just keep the Scotch tape in place while listening to, or playing music, and this can work very well. It's "low-tech" but has been used widely to help offset the problems with current digital hearing aids, at least while listening and playing music.


Dr. Chasin is an audiologist and the Director of Auditory Research at the Musicians' Clinics of Canada. He is also the Coordinator of Research at the Canadian Hearing Society, Adjunct Professor at the University of Toronto (in Linguistics), Adjunct Research Assistant Professor at the State University of New York (SUNY) at Buffalo, and an Associate Professor in Audiology at the University of Western Ontario. Dr. Chasin received his B.Sc. in mathematics and linguistics at the University of Toronto, his M.Sc. in Audiology and Speech Sciences at the University of British Columbia, and his Doctor of Audiology (AuD) degree from the Arizona School of Health Sciences. Dr. Chasin serves on the board of several hearing loss prevention organizations such as Hearing, Education, and Awareness for Rockers (H.E.A.R.) and the Association of Adult Musicians with Hearing Loss (AAMHL). He has also served as the editor or a member of the editorial board of several industry and scholarly peer reviewed publications, most recently as the editor in chief of the Canadian Hearing Report. He has served on several governmental and regulatory committees, both at the local and the national level. Dr. Chasin has been involved with hearing and hearing aid assessment since 1981 and is the author of over 200 clinically based articles. He has lectured extensively, and is the author or editor of several books. Dr. Chasin is the author or editor of "Musicians and the Prevention of Hearing Loss", "CIC Handbook", "Noise Control- a primer", "Hear the Music", "Hearing Loss in Musicians", and in 2010, Consumer Handbook of Hearing Loss and Noise. Dr. Chasin has been the recipient of several awards including the 2009 Presidents award from the Canadian Academy of Audiology as well as the 1991 Eve Kassirer Award for outstanding professional achievement from the Canadian Association of Speech Language Pathologists and Audiologists (CASLPA).

I'm afraid it doesn't work that way.


Midi files are essentially scores. They don't store the music itself, but rather the positions of instruments meant to be played. The computer does the rest. This is why midi files are so small, because they are just the score of the song.

So you'll either have to compose your MIDI by hand, or get a program to do it for you (Which will sound REALLY bad and nothing like what your MP3 sounds like). You're better off doing it yourself.


Long story short; you cannot.



Think of MP3 music as being like a JPG of a text document, while MIDI is like the raw text file. It's easy to turn a text file into a JPG (open an image editor, use the text tool, paste your text, save the image) but it's a whole other kettle of fish to do the other way around. It's technically possible with software that does optical character recognition, bu1 tncy arc pr0m to connn1t crror5 thot rnakc the tcxl unreadable. (If you deciphered the previous sentence, congrats.) And even that comparison is generous, because music is a lot more complex acoustically than a text is graphically. There's a limited number of character shapes and the document can be expected to have high contrast that makes the shapes simpler to distinguish and recognize (after all, they're meant to be read). Music is very, very different from that.


So your choices are use something that will "convert" your MP3 to a MIDI and give you horrible garbage, or just try to transcribe the music into MIDI by hand, and process not entirely dissimilar from trying to transcribe music you hear into its sheet notation.

I've used WIDI in the past. Be advised it's not free, and the tool is extremely rough. It tends to overdo certain notes, causing high pitched spikes in the music. I tend to use it as a rough head-start for when I'm transcribing, as it does get the notes right, it just fills the notes with unwanted crap in the process. However it's probably the best tool out there for doing this.

I play in the band at church. I get music chord charts that come from CCLI. The charts are in PDF format. They have the header, song information, and maybe the page number inside the PDF as text, and the actual lyrics and chords as an embedded graphic. My goal is the extract all the text out into a straight text document that I can send to my iPad to my music program called OnSong. OnSong uses straight text with some tags in it to display songs for musicians and can change the key, organize into sets, etc...

This weeks song list, I tried for 5 hours with Acrobat and every possible export format. I tried using online converters and several other things. I finally gave up and just typed the entire songs from scratch.

OCR'ing musical scores is not something that I would have expected Acrobat to do successfully. Keep in mind that Acrobat is not a general purpose OCR application. For more challenging OCR jobs, I keep a copy of Abbyy's FineReader around, but I have no idea how that would perform when confronted with a musical score.

You may want to try software meant to import scanned music like Make Music Finale or Avid Sibelius. There may be other software that can do this too but the ones mentioned are the ones I know offer some type of scan and OCR capability for music.

Yes, chord charts can be with the both notated music, notated music with finger charts, words with finger charts and lyrics with the letter abbreviated chord method example you have posted. That being said, then as a process you need to make sure that your scan is at least 300 dpi for Acrobat to OCR the scan properly. Scanning at a resolution of 150 - 200 dpi might work too, but as a general rule the better the scan, within reasonable file size limitations, the more accurate the OCR. Do you have an example scan??

By subscribing to Amazon Music, you can download Amazon Music to the Amazon Music app for offline listening, but the downloaded Amazon Music is not saved as local files on the computer and is restricted from being played with other player except the Amazon Music app. Sidify Amazon Music Converter for Mac is specially designed for Mac users to download music from Amazon Prime and Amazon Music Unlimited to MacBook or iMac. You own the Amazon downloads and you can  keep them forever.

I find this question interesting but because of my lack of knowledge in music this is a hard topic to solve. However as a programmer with many decades of experience working with symbolic programing languages this has a lot of connectivity to many problems in my experience pool.

In the context of sheet music notation, GBAC does not have a standard meaning or usage. It is possible that you may be referring to a specific notation or symbol used in a particular piece of sheet music, in which case more context would be needed to provide an accurate answer.

The GABC notation system is often used by scholars and musicians who specialize in early music, particularly Gregorian chant, which is the traditional music of the Roman Catholic Church. The notation is designed to be used with specialized software that can interpret and display the GABC notation, allowing musicians to study and perform the music using historically informed techniques. Some popular software programs that support GABC notation include Gregorio, Square Note, and Illuminare Score Editor.

As the music scores will grow long when displayed on the ChatGPT page, consider using Stylebot to increase the output width. See this which includes a demo of a wider width and instructions on how to use with ChatGPT with Chrome. 0852c4b9a8

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