What's up, doc. Welcome to the forum & the world of recording!
The long answer to your question can be found here:
"Difference Between MIDI and Audio"
http://www.cakewalk.com/S...essons/MIDIvsAudio.asp The short answer is this, more or less... There are 2 types of "recordings". The most common one we think of is called "Audio" (singing into a mic, playing a guitar plugged into your computer). The 2nd type is called "MIDI" and is actually not a sound recording but merely a map of what notes were played.
On its own, a MIDI recording is as useless as a piece of sheet music without an instrument. When you playback your MIDI track, the computer tells your keyboard what to play. That's why the sound always comes out of your keyboard speakers & also why changing patches on your keyboard will change the "recorded" sound.
You can convert MIDI to Audio in a number of ways. You could
1. plug your keyboard outputs into your computer, then playback the MIDI track while recording your keyboard's output as Audio; or
2. route your MIDI track's output to an internal MIDI device (a software synth on your computer), and use the feature "Bounce MIDI to Audio"
Someone else might be able to explain it better, or you could check out that Cakewalk link. It can be confusing at first, but once you get the hang of it, everything makes sense
edit: oops looks like I was a few seconds too late. NTO already explained things pretty well.
post edited by Spaceduck - 2009/10/26 08:53:51