On Fri, Jul 22, 2016 at 8:28 AM, Mojca Miklavec [via Lilypond] <
ml-node+s1069038n19296...@n5.nabble.com> wrote:

> Off-topic:
>
> That said, I wouldn't mind suggestions for some good OpenSource (GUI)
> MIDI editors. I have a bunch of weird MIDI files that I would like to
> turn into scores. They sound OK, but I'm not exactly sure if they were
> just obfuscated on purpose or if they are recordings of "human
> players" and thus the timings are some horrible (i)rational numbers.
>
> A friend of mine also has a midi interface for her accordion and I'm
> thinking of asking her to play some of the songs she knows and then
> turn them into nicely typeset scores (hoping that there is a way to do
> that faster than by asking her to play it slowly and write everything
> down as she plays).
>
> I did try to play with different settings of midi2ly, but didn't yet
> find the magic recipe for fixing the timing of those (obfuscated?)
> MIDIs.
>
> I checked some software websites, but the software usually has to be
> compiled/packaged first (I need it for OS X), so I better pick the
> best one from the start before spending hours resolving all
> dependencies and reporting all the compile problems upstream :)
>
> Reasonably priced commercial software would also be fine.
>

I haven't tried this one, but it looks very nice and has a convenient
quantization function to clean things up for you. It's cross-platform for
both Windows and Linux:

http://midieditor.sourceforge.net/

HTH,
Abraham




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