![]() ![]() Also, it cannot respond to MIDI clock, so you cannot say, “once you get this MIDI message, in 3 16th notes send this other one.” These two limitations (and the fact that it costs over $75 for the OSX version) made me decide to write Mjdj MIDI Morph. What’s Wrong With Bomes MIDI Translator? – Nothing at all! I’ve purchased and used the most popular MIDI Translator in my musical “rig.” I found its pseudo-programming language to be clumsy, though the GUI is nice. On the output side, the same thing is true: Besides sending MIDI messages and typing keystrokes, morphs can also do anything that a Java program can do: upload, download, tweet, make network connections… the sky’s the limit! However, since your morphs are written in Java, they can respond to anything a Java program can respond to: network input, changes in a file system, time-based events, weather changes (you just need the right API). Mjdj also has built-in support for responding to MIDI clock, as well as for typing keystrokes. Morphs turn your MIDI control surfaces and devices into custom controllers and instruments.īeyond MIDI? – Mjdj Morphs can respond to MIDI and produce MIDI. When you turn your knob up, you want some to go up, others to go down, and you want that to invert when you press your button. For example, you have a MIDI Control Surface that talks to your DAW (e.g., Ableton Live, or Traktor), but you want to use a knob and a button to control several knobs in a non-standard way. What’s a MIDI Morph? – Morphs process MIDI input and produce MIDI output. Mjdj is battle-tested, extremely flexible, and 100% written in Java. MIDI Morphs (think “processors” or “translators”) are written in Java against the Mjdj API: they can respond to MIDI input and produce MIDI output. Mjdj MIDI Morph is a free MIDI platform for Windows, OSX and Linux written in Java.
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