How to convert MIDI files to guitar staff

• Oct 17, 2022 - 18:46

Bare with me as I'm fairly new to Musescore.
I am a classical guitar player. I recorded a song on MP3. I converted it to MIDI files using an open source MIDI converter (https://basicpitch.spotify.com/) which I then opened in Musescore 3.

The problem is it opened as a piano score, not a guitar score. I have two staffs, like for piano, and notes are scattered on both staff. Moreover, some staff use the G clef and others the F clef.

How can I import MID guitar files directly in Musescore so I can see a "real" guitar score?
How to cleanup the score that looks pretty weird on the first import?
See attached picture.

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Comments

The "directly to guitar" part is caused by the MIDI having that instrument information in it. As you've noticed, most convertor/interpreter software doesn't have that. As a consequence the instrument definition defaults to the first defined instrument in the General MIDI specification, which is a Piano.

In the import panel, just make sure to uncheck the "split staff" option and it'll import into a single Piano staff.
You then may use the Staff/Part-properties to "change instrument" to a guitar.

OK, I've tried all that, except I still can't work it out!
I import my midi file, consisting of only one guitar part, and for the first import, I can't see where to "uncheck the split staff" option. But I do see it once the file has been imported.

Once imported, I unchecked that option, which removed the "piano" two parts, but now I'm stuck with a bass clef (F). I tried to add a guitar instrument, but it only adds it under "Electric piano" (the default option).

Now, how do I move the Bass notes (Electric piano) to the Treble part (guitar), and how to remove the Bass staff afterwards?

See screenshot.

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Screenshot-oct26.png 17.05 KB

In reply to by Jackie Kerouac

As you are seeing, import from a format as limited as MIDI is often very problematic for anything but the most simplistic music (eg, one note at a time, only simple and perfectly quantized note values). You're often better off just entering the notes normally instead. Either way, you need the same basic set of skills, but entering notes correctly in the first place is usually way easier than fixing notes entered incorrectly - especially when multiple voices are involved as they practically always are for guitar.

Tons of tutorials out there on entering and editing scores. I can't help but mention my online course - https://school.masteringmusescore.com/p/complete, but I'm sure others can make other recommendations.

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