If your MIDI goes synchronously with the audio, you should start moving your notes around. If you adjust the tempo at one point, the changed tempo will go continuously to the point where you clicked next (or, if there are not any points after this one, to the end of the MIDI file).Ĩ. If you move your mouse over that area your pointer changes to a pencil, making you able to draw the tempo of the file: The big pink/peach coloured area represents the tempo of the MIDI file. Right click there and select Tempo (course) the bottom of the piano editor will change to this: To adjust the tempo, click any of the piano roll tracks to call up the piano roll editor, then down in the bottom left of the piano roll screen there will be a blank section of window: To see, what tempo your MIDI file is actually using, look at the play controls: If they don't, it means the tempo of the MIDI file is unsynchronised with the audio file. Then listen to all of the song to check if all of the notes from the MIDI play synchronously to the ones from the audio track. Do this untill the first note of the MIDI plays as close to the first note of the audio track. Use an audio editor like Audacity to either add or cut small amounts of silence to the beginning of the audio track, then reload the audio track in Fruity Loops and press play. The silence on the audio track may be longer/shorter than on the MIDI. Most songs have a small amount of silence at the begining.
If the audio and the MIDI are out of synchronity, there are two possible reasons for it. Click the first beat key which is just to the right of the instrument button to tell the program to start playing the song right from the beginning. That's because the MIDIs are placed on the piano rolls and the audio is still placed on normal sequencer beat keys.Ħ. You may have noticed that the notes track doesn't look the same for the audio track and for the MIDI tracks. You should see a box similar to that:Ĭlick on the file loader button and browse for your song file. Choose Channels > Add one > Audio Clip from the menu. Right click on every of the instrument buttons of the tracks you will be using and choose Replace/FL Keys.ĥ. Delete any of the instrument tracks you don't want by right clicking on the instrument button and choosing Delete.Ĥ. Your MIDI should be loaded and you should see the instrument tracks listed near the top:ģ. It will come up with a box don't change anything here except for the Realign events, which should be turned off. Choose your MIDI in the dialog that pops out. Run Fruity Loops and choose File/Import Midi. Check if the MIDI file and the song file are similar to themselves and are the same version of the song you are going to fret.Ģ. This tutorial is done using Fruity Loops as a MIDI editor.ġ.