The generation of MIDI notes from audio material offers a wealth of different creative possibilities. You can use this technique, for example, to derive from a drum loop a quantization reference for other MIDI tracks in your DAW. That is equally true whichever algorithm is used, with a few algorithm-specific exceptions: In the case of vocals, breaths are not exported as MIDI notes and if you save rhythmic material or material edited with the Universal algorithm as MIDI, all the MIDI notes will share the same pitch but take their position, length and amplitude from their audio equivalents in the rhythm track. The velocity of each MIDI note is derived from the amplitude of the audio note it represents. For each audio note, a MIDI note is created with the same position, length and pitch. The MIDI notes are an exact representation of the audio notes in Melodyne. See this screenshot highlighting the master and port configuration, and watch the videos below showing how to configure Dodo MIDI 2 in Reaper, Ableton Live, PreSonus Studio One, and Cubase 11.Melodyne allows you to export audio notes as MIDI notes, in order, for example, to double your vocals with a sound from a software synthesizer. ![]() If you add more tracks with Dodo MIDI, give each pair of Dodo MIDI instances their own port number.
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