is "gun" a percussion instrument #generalmidi
is "gun" a percussion instrument #generalmidi
Free download codes:
Sunny, The Musician! - Terminal
"This album was partly inspired by Pink Floyd's Dark Side of the Moon, partly a concept album with old-school general midi."
#ambient #electronic #indierock #folk #progressiverock #dreamy #midi #indiealternative #midirock #generalmidi #music
Free download codes:
Sunny, The Musician! - Terminal
"This album was partly inspired by Pink Floyd's Dark Side of the Moon, partly a concept album with old-school general midi."
#ambient #electronic #indierock #folk #progressiverock #dreamy #midi #indiealternative #midirock #generalmidi #music
If you were a fan of the Roland MT-32, youâll love the MIDI Blaster that JP built and the devices that inspired it! #generalmidi #midi #mt32 https://hachyderm.io/@prcutler/114971198879894365
XIAO ESP32-C3 MIDI Synthesizer â Part 3
So, now that the basics are out of the way Iâm going to dive into the specifics of the Dream SAM2695 chip itself.
Warning! I strongly recommend using old or second hand equipment for your experiments. I am not responsible for any damage to expensive instruments!
These are the key tutorials for the main concepts used in this project:
If you are new to microcontrollers, see the Getting Started pages.
The Dream SAM2695
I first encountered this device on a breakout board several years ago, called a âGM Mini Moduleâ. Various tutorials at the time showed how to hook this up to an Arduino. For example, my specific module had the following suggested application:
The breakout was essentially just the SAM2695 with an additional MIDI IN circuit and DIN socket.
At the time it was a component of the âfluxamasynthâ â an Arduino shield containing the chip. Whilst the shield is now discontinued, a number of resources still remain online about it: https://github.com/fluxly/Fluxamasynth
Since then there have been a number of modules released that use this neat synth chip, probably the most recognisable of which is perhaps the M5 MDI Synth: https://shop.m5stack.com/products/midi-synthesizer-unit-sam2695
There is also a M5 module with built-in MIDI DIN socket too.
This latest XIAO device follows in the footsteps of all these other variations but adds the microcontroller, and ESP32-C3, to make a complete âsystemâ.
I happen to have three of these devices â the original Dream âGM mini moduleâ, M5 synth and the XIAO, so Iâll do a post about them together at some point, but the all work in essentially the same way.
This series of posts is mostly taking a detailed look at the XIAO MIDI Synthesizer, but the following post shows how to use a XIAO SAMD21 to talk to the M5 Stack Synth: XIAO USB Device to Serial MIDI Converter.
The datasheet for the SAM2695 describes its capabilities:
Interestingly it supports a parallel or serial MIDI access. But using serial is by far the easiest as it can link up directly to another microcontrollerâs UART or an opto-isolator of a standard MIDI IN circuit.
The GM Sound Engine
The SAM2695 has two complete instrument banks and a drum set. The banks are as follows:
The device also supports effects and an equaliser. All additional controls are configured using either MIDI NRPN or SysEx message. And there are a lot of messages defined in the datasheet!
There are also a number of control messages which apparently have to be sent over the parallel data interface.
But what I am most interested in is the MIDI implementation for the common range of MIDI messages, the most useful of which (to me) are listed below.
MIDI MessageHEXNotesCompatibilityNote On9n kk vvMIDINote Off8n kk vvMIDIPitch BendEn ll hh14-bit pitch bend data hhllGMProgram ChangeCn ppGM/GSChannel AftertouchDn vvMIDIControl ChangeBn cc ddSee table below for specific control change messagesRPNBn 65 âŚRegistered parameter numbers (see datasheet)MIDI/GMNRPNBn 63 âŚNon-registered parameter numbers (see datasheet)GS/DREAMSysExF0 7E 7F 09 01 F7MIDI ResetGMSysExF0 7F 7F 04 01 00 vv F7Master volumeGMSysExF0 41 00 42 12 ⌠F7Range of GS specific SysEx messages (see datasheet)GSSysExF0 00 20 00 00 ⌠F7Dream specific âport writeâ commandDREAMMIDI Control Change Messages
CommandHEXDefaults / NotesBank SelectBn 00 cc0ModulationBn 01 cc0 (Rate/Depth set via SysEx)Portamento TimeBn 05 ccChannel VolumeBn 07 cc100PanBn 0A cc64ExpressionBn 0B cc127Sustain PedalBn 40 cc0 (>63 ON)PortamentoBn 41 cc0 (>63 ON)Sostenuto PedalBn 42 cc0 (>63 ON)Soft PedalBn 43 cc0 (>63 ON)ReverbBn 50 vv4 (0..7 = reverb effects)ChorusBn 51 vv2 (0..7 = chorus effects)Reverb SendBn 5B vvChorus SendBn 5D vvAll Sound OffBn 78 00Reset All ControllersBn 79 00All Notes OffBn 7B 00Mono OnBn 7E 00Poly OnBn 7F 00Defaults to poly on power upCC1Bn cc vvcc=00..5F, Fn set by SysExCC2Bn cc vvcc=00..5F, Fn set by SysExTo be honest, Iâm not sure I quite understand those last two, but that seems to be what it is saying in the datasheetâŚ
There are a /lot/ of parameters accessible over NRPN or SysEx relating to the routing of signals in the device, the effects and the equaliser. At this point Iâm just experimenting with the basics above.
Any of the MIDI interfaces allows me to test it out, but using a XIAO SAMD21 in USB MIDI device mode is the easiest as I can just plug it into a computer and fire up MIDIOx and start messing around with some of the above.
Closing Thoughts
There is a lot to the SAM2695, so I can see why it has captured interest once again after a few years seeming almost forgotten.
It would be nice to build some kind of knob-based interface that supports many of the parameters in the synth, but I guess the major application is meant to be for when some kind of âcompatibleâ sound card is required âoff the shelfâ. For that, it would appear that the SAM2695 can be a General MIDI Synth, a Roland âGeneral Soundâ (GS) Synth or even a Roland MT-32.
Not bad for a small, relatively easily integrated component!
Kevin
Finished my #ITXLlama builds today. Built around the #Chieftec BT-02 case, it features the ITX Llama motherboard, a #Radeon 9250 and a #3dprinted front control panel I designed with #OLED display, rotary encoder and buttons for the #MT32Pi. Also a much needed reset button, a switch to select either the MT32-pi or GS WaveTable audio and an SD slot. The software needs a bit of tweaking, but this could be an awesome and brand new box for playing #90s era #MSDOS and #Windows98 games. So far it plays #DukeNukem3D flawlessly with #GeneralMIDI sound.
MT32-Pi on my EuroRack MiniDexed PCB
This is great. I was asked by Michel (mragutlich) if I knew how to build MT32-Pi to configure it for my MiniDexed EuroRack PCB but I donât and there isnât a lot of information apparently on how to build it from source.
So I offered my Rebuilding my Ability to Build MiniDexed post which talks about getting to the point of being able to build MiniDexed and as both synths run on circle, figured that would be a pretty good starting point.
And then Michel came back to me with a complete set of instructions for Ubuntu and Iâve just run through them â and they work great.
So massive thanks to Michel, this is how you could get MT32-Pi running on my MiniDexed EuroRack PCB.
https://makertube.net/w/2xzd8b4RPDPX1YJL3CpA57
Warning! I strongly recommend using old or second hand equipment for your experiments. I am not responsible for any damage to expensive instruments!
Previous posts on MT32-Pi:
If you are new to microcontrollers and single board computers, see the Getting Started pages.
Parts list
Building MT32-Pi on Ubuntu
Here are Michelâs instructions that worked for me.
Setup a Ubuntu 20.4 LTS system.
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get upgrade
sudo apt-get install build-essential
sudo apt-get install gcc-arm-none-eabi
sudo apt-get install git
sudo apt-get install curl
sudo apt-get install dialog
sudo apt-get install cmake
sudo apt-get install pkg-config
sudo apt-get install glib-2.0 Now clone the mt32-pi github repo
git clone ârecursive https://github.com/dwhinham/mt32-pi.git
cd mt32-pi
nano src/control/simpleencoder.cpp In nano change the following lines
constexpr u8 GPIOPinButton1 = 5;
constexpr u8 GPIOPinButton2 = 6;
constexpr u8 GPIOPinEncoderButton = 11;
constexpr u8 GPIOPinEncoderCLK = 10;
constexpr u8 GPIOPinEncoderDAT = 9;
ctrl-X and say âYâ
make all
If everything goes well you will have a kernel8.img file in your directory.
Now hook up a microSD cardreader to your Linux environment and insert a blank microSD card
Goto the ~/scripts dir and start mt32pi_installer.sh , this will install all the needed bare metal files
sudo ./mt32pi_installer.sh
When ready copy the kernel8.img file to the SD card
Change in the mt32-pi.cfg file the line âencoder_reversed = offâ to 'on', now the volume knob will increase when turned clockwise
Copy the MT32 roms to to the rom dir
Copy some Sf2 soundfont files tot the soundfont dir
Thats itâŚunmount the sd card , put it in your Zero 2 WâŚand boot it.. the MT32pi logo should appear on the oled screen and the buttons and rotary encoder should work properly
The first button switches between m32 and soundfont mode.
The second button will switch to the next rom or soundfont file
The rotary encoder will change the master volume.
The encoder switch only displays a message that the button is pressed
There were a couple of tweaks I needed. First of, the mt32_inistaller.sh script has to be run as root. This will go through and ask you to choose the SD card to format and install and so on.
At some point you will need some MT32 ROMs. There are details of how to do that on the original MT32-Pi project here: https://github.com/dwhinham/mt32-pi?tab=readme-ov-file#-quick-start-guide
In addition to the aforementioned âencoder_reversedâ setting in the mt32-pi.cfg file there are a couple of other options I find used (many of these were already set up by the installer):
[system]
default_synth = mt32 or soundfount
output_device = i2s
[control]
scheme = simple_encoder
encoder_reversed = on
mister = off
[mt32emu]
midi_channels = alternate
[lcd]
type = ssd1306_i2c
width = 128
height = 32
i2c_lcd_address = 3c
I think those were the major changes.
I installed a single ânewâ ROM and a PCM ROM. The default soundfont is already installed. And that was essentially that.
The first time I tried it, Iâd forgotten to copy over the kernel8.img file, so that took a moment to figure out! But apart from that it was all pretty straight forward for me. Many of the packages to install at the start were already there and up to date, so that didnât take too long and the build itself was again fairly straight forward.
Closing Thoughts
A big thanks to Michel for asking the question, then figuring out the answer, and most importantly sending me the instructions and permission to post them here.
This is a great additional option for my PCB đ
The video shows the MT32-Pi in Soundfont mode playing a MIDI file of Khachaturianâs Masquerade Waltz.
It is great to have a full General MIDI Soundfont device in EuroRack format.
Kevin
I see a number of recent Roland MT-32 clone projects out there, built using Raspberry Pi and the like. I don't see any that are being sold, pre-assembled.
The BulkyMIDI-32 looks great, but I don't think it's being sold, assembled.
If such things are on offer, can someone point me to a decent unit?
#MIDI #Roland #RolandMT32 #MT-32 #generalmidi #music #audio #vintagecomputing #retrocomputing #retrogaming #DOS #AtariST #Amiga #RaspberryPi #RPi #modernretro
Today is a big day for DOS emulation, now we have 100% authentic Sound Canvas (Roland SC-55) emulation in Staging via Nuked SC-55 𼳠đ đť đ
Grab the latest dev build from here:
https://www.dosbox-staging.org/releases/development-builds/
Then follow the installation instructions from the PR below:
Search "manual testing" and follow the steps under "usage" (this will be more streamlined in the final; the plugin (without the ROM files) will be included in the distribution package)
https://github.com/dosbox-staging/dosbox-staging/pull/4090
#DOSGaming #MS-DOS #Emulation #RetroGaming #LinuxGaming #MacGaming #FOSS #Roland #SoundCanvas #SC-55 #MIDI #GeneralMIDI
I implemented a fairly complete #GeneralMIDI table. It was quite a work! I am struggling though with the percussion sounds. This is an example of the drumkit while playing the bass drum (B0), the Closed Hi-Hat (F#1), and the Acoustic Snare (D1). Not impressive! I think I can get something better from the #SID.
@polpo I'm shure it's not a #CS4237B like @rasteri used for the #Wee86, so it's not acting like a Quad-Mode #AdLib / #SoundBlaster / #GeneralMidi / #Wavetable-Synth card...
Or does it?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZBsv-jRiIT8&t=244s
DOS Gaming MIDI: Roland MT-32 / SoundCanvas SC-55 / SC-88, mt32-pi & SoundBlaster Hanging Note Fix
Here, as reference is a Roland TN-SC1, number 13, Dance 3. Also came in a big box (to justify the price), but card is small. Fits inside a PCMCIA case but a different technology altogether. The next series would be based on General Midi/GS instead of MT32 as a midi standard, and would include 8 styles.
#synth #midi #style #arranger #mt32 #ra50 #GM #gs #generalmidi #Roland #LASynthesis #keyboard #retromusic #stylecard #Rom
Question into my bubble: what is the minimal number and style of MIDI messages to produce a note via a MPU401 interface?
#generalmidi
I let Midjourney recreate the most important US General of all time:
General MIDI
It seems that I'm not in the mood to record serious things.
So, here is some general midi escalator music / library music, made on the crappy but cool yamaha QY-8 (i love this little thing.)
A small preview of today's work.
I'm quite happy with the whole thing, I'll make some minor tweaking tomorrow. It always feels special to finish the recording of a track.
#opl2 #adlib #ElektroPlankton #chipmusic #GeneralMidi #chiptune #KorgVolca #synth #musodon
You can probably guess what kind of tools I used to make this thing from the hashtags. :D
Retro spaceship shooty game music sketch from last year.
This was made with #Reaper and FluidSynth soundfont being an SC-55/SCC-1 clone.
Just realised that I have never spammed mammothsite with my old music.
Here's Work 0, a sort-of dungeon synth thing that I wrote in 1994/1995. There's a longer full band black metal version of the same track under a different name, but fuck knows where that tape is.
Composed on a Roland SCC-1 using Musicator Win, this copy recorded a couple of years ago from a Roland SC-55.
#music #DungeonSynth #electronicMusic #GeneralMIDI #MIDI #RolandSC55 #instrumental #GM #GS