Hi,
Why is it that if I play middle C on my piano, it shows up as note C5 in Sonar - but when I trigger VSampler from Sonar, VSampler registers the same note as C3! Which is correct?
I did a bit of research on Wikipedia - this notation (which Sonar calls "diatonic") is apparently also known as "Scientific Pitch Notation":
[Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_pitch_notation]
"there is no one standard which correlates any particular octave number to a specific frequency range. For instance, traditional pitch class notation, Japanese MIDI specs and American MIDI specs may specify dissimilar ordinals for middle C (C3 vs. C4)"
However, the same article - and most other acticles I found on the web - refer to middle C as C4 (e.g. the article above says "A4 refers to the A above middle C"). In addition, most of the sample libraries I looked at with WAV files had middle C with a filename using either C4 or C3. So, it seems there is a defacto standard of calling middle C either C4 or C3, with C4 appearing more common. So why is Cakewalk using C5? Can this be overridden anywhere?
One thing everyone seems to agree on unambiguously is that middle C is MIDI note number 60. So everything seems to "work"... you just need to realize the diatonic note names such as "C4" are just labels, which seem to be inconsistent from one program/sample library to another.
One of the reasons I'm asking is for building my own a multisamples. I'm tempted to label middle C as e.g. ".... C4. wav" because it seems the most common convention. How do other people do it?
But if I do that, then when I place my samples into VSampler I have to remember to drag "... C4.wav" on to the note VSampler displays as "C3". And then, to trigger this note from Sonar and/or Project5, I have to hit "C5". How confusing!!!
Any enlightenment appreciated!
Thanks,
tj