Provided by: playmidi_2.4debian-17_amd64 

NAME
playmidi, xplaymidi, splaymidi — MIDI file player
SYNOPSIS
[s|x]playmidi [-a8cCdeEfF4gGiImoprRtvVz] [file ...]
DESCRIPTION
playmidi is a full-featured MIDI file player for Linux systems or others using the Voxware 3.5 sound
driver or newer. It can play back MIDI files on general MIDI devices or FM or Gravis Ultrasound. If no
files are specified, playmidi will give a summary of all command line options. If more than one file is
specified, you can use xplaymidi or splaymidi or -r mode for interactive control, allowing you to skip to
the previous song, next song, speed up or slow down the MIDI file, or repeat a MIDI file while viewing a
real-time display of data in the MIDI file.
The Debian playmidi package does not include splaymidi.
OPTIONS
Command line options are described below. (make sure to precede them with a dash (``-''))
-H
--help
display the help text then exit.
-v
verbosity (additive).
-8
force the use of 8-bit patches with the Gravis Ultrasound to conserve memory. Patches are
automatically reloaded as 8-bit when memory runs out, but if you know in advance, you can save a step
and speed up the loading process.
-c#
set the channel mask (in hexadecimal) of which channels to play from the MIDI file. This is useful if
you have a MIDI file with some channels that don't sound very good on your hardware.
-d
ignore any drum (percussion) tracks in a MIDI file. This is useful for FM or any other hardware where
percussion sounds especially bad. Also useful for MIDI files where the percussion is poorly written.
-e
send output to external MIDI. This is what you'll want to do if you have any MIDI hardware connected
to your system. This option is the default for playmidi as distributed by upstream.
-f
send output to FM synth using FM patches. You'll need to use this option to playback on any non-MIDI
soundcard with the exception of the Gravis Ultrasound. This option is the default for playmidi in
Debian.
-4
send output to FM synth using 4-op OPL/3 patches (BROKEN!) Don't use this option since it doesn't work
yet.
-g
send output to Gravis Ultrasound. If you have one of these without anything connected to the MIDI
port, this option is for you.
-a
send output to various SoundBlaster cards, including AWE and Live. If you have one of these without
anything connected to the MIDI port, this option is for you.
-E#
set mask of channels to always output to external MIDI. If you want to use more than one playback
device, this option allows you to specify what channels to send to the external MIDI port. For
example, 00FF would send channels 1 - 8 to external MIDI.
-F#
set mask of channels to always output to FM. Used as above.
-G#
set mask of channels to always output to gus. Used as above.
-i#
set the channel mask (in hexadecimal) of which channels to ignore from the MIDI file. This option is
good for MIDI files with a few channels you don't want to listen to.
-p[chan,]prog[,chan,prog...]
forces a given program number (1-128) to be used for all output on given channel, or if no channel is
specified, program will be used for all channels. For example: -p33 sets all channels to program 33,
-p5,124 sets just channel 5 to program 124, and -p1,33,2,55,9,22,10,17 sets channel 1 to program 33,
channel 2 to program 55, channel 9 to program 22, and channel 10 (percussive) to use the Power Drum
Set. If you're using a Waveblaster, you'll want to use -p10,129 to set channel 10 to playback
percussion. You should quote arguments to -p if you want to include whitespace between them.
-I
shows a list general MIDI programs and numbers. This is intended to make it easier to use the above
option.
-t#
skews tempo by a factor (float). This is good for files you think the author wrote too slow or two
fast. Also good if you want to listen to lots of files at high speeds, or play a file at slow speeds
in order to learn to play a song on some instrument (like piano).
-r
real time ansi (25-line) playback graphics tracking of all notes on each channel and the current
playback clock. This flag is assumed when using xplaymidi or splaymidi.
-P#
remap all percussion channels to play on given channel. This is useful if you have a file with
percussion on multiple MIDI channels and your MIDI hardware only supports percussion on one channel.
For example -P10 would send all percussion channels to channel 10.
-R#
set initial reverb level. Valid range is 0 - 127. For FM, the setting is either "on" (nonzero), or
"off" (zero).
-C#
set initial chorus level. Valid range is 0 - 127.
-Vchn,vel[,chn,vel...]
set velocity for all notes in a channel. All velocity information for the given channel will be
replaced by the given velocity. One day I'll change this option to allow all channels to be modified
as with the -p option.
-x#
excludes the given channel number from the mask of channels to load from the MIDI file.
-z
zero channel data in output stream — for special applications.
AUTHOR
Nathan Laredo (laredo@gnu.ai.mit.edu)
HISTORY
playmidi was originally designed out of impatience with other MIDI players. The startup time is
negligible on all devices except Gravis Ultrasound (must wait for patches to load). The meaning of the
various real-time displays is yet to be documented.
Playmidi 2.x is nearly a total re-write compared with the original 1.1 release.
BUGS
splaymidi doesn't properly restore terminal mode on exit; you may want to use ";stty sane" at the end of
any splaymidi command. GUS playback quality will improve as kernel driver improves. A lot of new
features of playmidi are as of yet undocumented. 4-op FM playback doesn't work. Some incomplete or
corrupted MIDI files may cause unpredictable results or seg faults. No other known bugs. If you want
new features or find undocumented ones (bugs), please email laredo@gnu.ai.mit.edu.
Linux 1.3.60+ (Modified 24 November 2002) PLAYMIDI(1)