MacMusic.org  |  PcMusic.org  |  440Software  |  440Forums.com  |  440Tv  |  Zicos.com  |  AudioLexic.org
Loading... visiteurs connectés
Bienvenue invité
> Yamaha, Finale, And Mac Osx Leopard - Idiot Guide?, Never installed midi before on OSX, need guidance
jmcm
posté lun. 7 avril 2008, 17:33
Message #1


Newbie


Groupe : Members
Messages : 5
Inscrit : 07 avril 08
Membre no 100,167




Essentials:
System - Mac OS X Leopard OR Tiger (or have older machines running Panther);
Typesetting software - Finale;
Midi device - Yamaha PortableGrand NP-30

I typeset for years on OS9 with Finale, and an old Roland plugged into my Mac via the serial connection, but after a couple of years doing no typesetting I am restarting, and had to pension off the old OS9 machine and Roland and upgrade Finale to run on my OSX machines. With the OS9 machine I just plugged in the Roland and it worked (with a bit of fiddling in Finale), but that approach isn't working with OSX. I have very little idea even where to start to get this working, so I'm looking for someone who could walk me through the steps as a complete beginner in installing a midi device to work with my Mac. Sorry.

(I did do a search of the threads to see if this had already been gone over, but couldn't find anything. If you can point me to a relevant thread I can go through that to see if I can get my devices working.)

What I've done:
I've installed the Yamaha USB Midi driver 1.1.0 and the update 1.1.1 - I can't find a newer one by searching with google. This appears in my System prefs, but when I start it up it tells me there is no USB midi device attached (oh yes there is). I've checked the cables, restarted, tried switching the plugs on my midi cable around and I'm getting lights on the cable, so something is working. I've also gone through the well-documented steps in Finale to try and reach the midi device that way, but failed as it's obviously not communicating with the system. I also started up Garage Band to see if it might find the keyboard for me, but it didn't.

The obvious possibilities are a) the Yamaha model I have is never going to talk to a Mac and I should have bought something more expensive; b) Leopard (which has issues with just about every software) has issues with 3rd party midi drivers, and I should try this on Tiger (which means a tedious reinstall, but I'll do it if I have to) or panther. On the other hand I may just have no idea what I'm doing and there's something completely obvious (to someone in the know) that I have missed.

I'm hoping someone has some experience that would save me a lot of time fiddling around and getting frustrated, and wouldn't mind helping me out. I'm not new to Macs, so am reasonably competent, but unfortunately it seems I'm a total deadhead with midi.
Go to the top of the page
 
+Quote Post
 
Start new topic
Réponse(s)
qusp74
posté sam. 12 avril 2008, 10:25
Message #2


Member
**

Groupe : Members
Messages : 62
Inscrit : 10 juil. 07
Lieu : Brisbane - AU
Membre no 92,865




jmcm,

'I would have thought that the 'midi in' plug would go into the 'midi in' socket, and ditto with the 'midi out'. When I did this none of the lights except the 'power' ones lit up. When I swapped the cables over I got lights on the 'midi in' indicators, but not the 'midi out' (feedback??). So I'm no wiser about which way is right!'

as philflood has said you must connect the 'midi in' plug on your emu to the 'midi out' port on your keyboard. blink.gif its weird I know but thats the way it goes. So if you think about it that way the fact that you got some feedback on the 'midi in' the interface was working when you did this shows that there shouldn't be any problem; you just have some routing to do so as to be able to trigger your 'Audio device'; philflood is also correct in that you need something to produce the audio for you such as a Virtual instrument or quicktime as the keyboard on its own will not transport audio into the computer without plugging it into an audio interface on your machine.

you will need to Setup audition to receive midi on the same channel/s (usually 1-16) as you keyboard is setup to 'transmit' on. These settings will need to be mirrored in your OS X Audio/midi preferences setup pages.Then you will have to insert an 'audio instrument' track, (or whatever it's called in audition), and set that track up to receive midi data on the same midi channel as you have chosen on your keyboard. Unfortunately I can't give you any 'Audition specific' advice as I haven't used it before.

Hope this helps tongue.gif

and you should be able to use a USB hub; it just has to be a powered one so it isn't relying on the bus for power.

Ce message a été modifié par qusp74 - sam. 12 avril 2008, 10:19.


--------------------
Jeremy Glover graphic designer and compositor extraordinair but a relative novice at audio
Mac G5 1.8DP 4gig ram .. RME Hammerfall DSP 9632 .. Behringer ADA8000 adat interface
• KRK ROKIT 6 and RP10S•Micro korg Synth/vocoder with RODE NT2-A
Logic pro 7 NI kontakt, battery FM8, Altiverb Arturia Moog modular minimoog arp2600.
Go to the top of the page
 
+Quote Post



Reply to this topicStart new topic
2 utilisateur(s) sur ce sujet (2 invité(s) et 0 utilisateur(s) anonyme(s))
0 membre(s) :

 

Version bas débit - samedi 14 déc. 2024, 20:21
- © MacMusic 1997-2008