Finale both imports and exports standard
MIDI files. A MIDI file has a format that can be understood by music
programs from different companies, including most sequencer programs—even
on other operating systems. If you prefer to compose by improvising in
your favorite sequencer, you could save your piece as a standard MIDI
file and let Finale notate it for you.
When you save a MIDI file, Finale saves
the instrument name (from the Instrument List) as the track name. When
you open a MIDI file, Finale uses the track name as the staff name (which
appears in the Staff Attributes dialog box).
To import
a MIDI file
To create the MIDI file, follow your sequencer’s
instructions. There’s no need to quantize the sequence; however, you’ll
probably find Finale’s quantization powers to be more effective than your
sequencer’s.
- Choose Open from the File Menu. The
Open dialog box appears. Three file types are listed at the bottom of
the window.
- Click MIDI File. The names of any available
MIDI files appear in the list box.
- Double-click the desired document name.
The Import MIDI File Options dialog box appears, listing various transcription
options.
- Specify the way in which you want the MIDI
file extracted onto Finale staves. If you click Tracks Become Staves,
each sequencer track becomes a Finale staff. If you click Channels Become
Staves, the contents of each MIDI channel (regardless of their track assignments)
become a Finale staff. In either case, Finale will choose a clef for each
resultant staff based on the range of notes in the track. (If it discovers
that the notes in a track have a very wide range, it will automatically
notate its contents on two staves. See Import
MIDI File Options dialog box for details.)
For even greater control over the track and channel extraction, click
Set Track-to-Staff List; the Track/Channel Mapping to Staves dialog box
appears, in which you can specify extremely sophisticated track and channel
splitting.
- Click Quant Settings. The Quantization
Settings dialog box appears.
- Click the icon representing your smallest note
value.
- Choose your quantization type. See Quantization Settings dialog
box for more details.
- Click More Settings. The More Quantization
Settings dialog box appears.
- Select the quantization settings you desire.
You can select options for grace notes and voice 2, as well as retain
key velocities and note durations. See More
Quantization Settings dialog box for details.
- Choose Key and Time Signature options.
Most MIDI files contain key and time signature information already, so
you usually won’t have to change the default selection (Use the File’s).
- If you’ll want to hear the sequence played
back with its original tempo fluctuations and continuous data (controllers
and wheels) data, make sure Tempo Changes and Continuous Data are selected.
These options capture some of the MIDI performance data from your sequence.
- Click OK (or press return).
Finale transcribes the MIDI File into standard notation. If you discover
that your settings weren’t quite right, you can close the new Finale document
and try again—the original MIDI file is unaffected by Finale’s transcription
efforts. Or, for smaller sectional changes, use the Retranscribe function
under the MIDI/Audio Menu. For more information about the elements of the Import
MIDI File Options dialog box, see Import
MIDI File Options dialog box and Retranscription.
To export
a MIDI file
- Prepare your Finale file. Keep in mind
that any playback data will be retained in the MIDI file. This includes
tempo changes (for those sequencers that support a tempo, or conductor,
track), dynamics, pitch wheel data, MIDI channel assignments, in addition
to Human Playback settings configured in the Playback Controls. To export a specific region, in the Playback
Controls, check Observe Playback Region when saving to MIDI or audio
file, and the specify the region you would like to export in the options
above.
Be sure to specify other important playback
options in the Playback/Record Options dialog box (choose Playback Controls from
the Window Menu; click the expand arrow; click Playback/Record Options). Remember
that you are exporting a MIDI file, text and layout will not be retained
in this format.
- Make sure that you have assigned Instruments
correctly (one for each resultant sequencer track). When Finale
creates a MIDI sequencer file, it places the music you’ve assigned to
each Instrument in the Instrument List dialog box in a separate sequencer
track. Therefore, make sure the Instrument configuration is set up the
same way you want the resultant tracks set up. See MIDI channels
for further instructions.
- Choose Save As from the File Menu. The
“Save
Finale file as” dialog box appears.
- Click
MIDI File, and enter a title in
the text box. Instead of clicking
MIDI File, you can also click the file icon (in the lower right corner
of the dialog box) until it changes to the MIDI file icon.
- Click Save (or press return).
Finale now asks which type of MIDI file you want to create: Format 1
(multiple tracks), Format 0 (a single, multichannel track), or just a
tempo map. Format 1 is by far the most common format. Also, choose whether
you want to save any bookmarks you created in Finale as sequencer marks
in your MIDI file.
- Select a MIDI file format by clicking the appropriate
button.