rappy

Aspiring Meal Enjoyer

Trans rights or GTFO. Trash Night every third Tuesday: https://www.twitch.tv/trashnightvideo See You on a MIDI.


rappy
@rappy

I have spent a little too much time lately surfing the Wayback Machine and nosing around for “alternative rock” MIDIs still available for download. Now that I have a few hundred of them, I’d like to go through and pipe them through hardware and see which ones transcend the format and which just use the trumpet for the vocal track. Maybe one does both!!!!!!!!! (There’s a version of Black Hole Sun that really elevates the harmonica and I’m not kidding.)

Anyway. Perhaps you would like to join! Here’s the Universal Resource Locator for all that: https://www.twitch.tv/rappyland


rappy
@rappy

Here's the VOD, but be forewarned that the jacked-up bootleg NDI stream I set up to pipe the audio work across my apartment to the streaming PC started collapsing midway through the stream (though checking "hardware acceleration" towards the last third seems to have fixed things), so I dunno how it all holds up to a rewatch. RIYL network jitter!

I collected all these files individually over the course of a couple of weeks by sifting through Waybacked links pages and file metadata, so in lieu of linking out each file I will instead proffer my primary sources:

Proper links to captured audio to come in a future post, I'm going back and dumping everything into Reaper in full now.

MIDI Composer Websites Perused

MIDI Rulings
As per traditional standards, MIDIs were filed into three categories: Rock, Rot, and Rule. For alternative MIDIs, we reasoned, to Rock is to provide a listenable and faithful version of the song in question; to Rot is to fail to do so; to Rule is to fail to do so, but in a positive, transformative, sometimes-breathtaking, and possibly-accidental manner.

The complete list, in a big-ass Markdown table, under the cut:



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in reply to @rappy's post:

I cranked out a handful of short tunes with it a couple years ago, and they weren't anything special but I thought they were OK, and it's a simple and constrained enough tool that I was able to get that far without getting overwhelmed like I have every time I've tried to learn "real" trackers. (A long time ago I was really interested in the modfile scene and even bought a multi-CD compilation of Kosmic Free Music Foundation releases.)

But then, of course, probable-ADHD-brain skittered off to a new thing.