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Black MIDI
A blackened musical notation, also called a black MIDI, black score and black sheet (Japanese: 黒楽譜, くろがくふ, ''Kuro Gakufu'', literally "black sheet music") is an experimental genre of music that uses MIDI files, to compose a song remix composed of a large number of notes (typically in the thousands all the way into the millions). It is usually done by filling up the sheet with thousands or millions of abnormally short notes, depending on style. A completed black MIDI will look like a recklessly colored and scribbled drawing on ruled paper if adapted to a score sheet. Most blackened songs are made from existing songs, although there are a few original compositions floating around the Internet. It is somewhat uncommon to have an originally composed black MIDI as many artists tend to use a playable piano transcription as the "base" MIDI. The word 'black' in 'Black MIDI' refers to the notation's typical appearance.〔http://knowyourmeme.com/memes/black-midi〕 A "black MIDI" and a "blackened musical notation" are not quite the same thing. Although a black MIDI is a blackened musical notation, it is not always the other way around. A blackened musical notation is a notation that is filled up and dyed up "black" by notes, usually very minute ones. A black MIDI on the other hand, is a blackened musical score in the form of a MIDI file. The Chinese name for "black score" is 黑乐谱 in Simplified Chinese and 黑樂譜 in Traditional Chinese; the pinyin form of them is "Hēi Yuè Pǔ," and is derived from the Japanese term for it. The corresponding Korean name for "black score" being 검은악보; its romanization is "geom eun agbo". == History ==
抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Black MIDI」の詳細全文を読む
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