This website is provided and maintained by me, Sheila Crossey. Please feel free to come and chat with me at rehearsals about any of this you'll find me in the alto section. Or you can send me email via the TCS website - go to the members page, send mail to the members address, and it will get automatically forwarded to me.
This is a resource for TCS members who like, or think they might like, to learn music by singing with their computers. The way it works is that you sing looking at your usual hardcopy score, with your computer acting as a very obedient accompanist responding to your whims and instructions. To get the full benefit, you need two things: a midi file for the particular piece of music you are rehearsing, and the right sort of software midi player to play it.
Midi files are a synthetic digital form of the music and are available free on the internet for a wide variety of choral classical music. See below for links to the music we're performing in the 2013 - 2014 season. If you simply click (left-click) on a link to a midi file, your browser will launch a streaming media player, and you will hear the music. The player will display a few buttons giving you only minimal control over the playback of the music (pause, fast forward, rewind, etc.).
With some extra effort, you can gain more control over the playback: e.g. adjust the volume of each part independently, change the speed (without affecting the pitch), and select which bar to start on. To do this, you will need to install a more fully-featured midi player and download (right-click) the midi files to your hard drive so that you can open them in the midi player. Luckily, a number of excellent midi players with the right features for rehearsing are available for free my favourite is Melody Assistant. To learn how to install and use it, read Midi hints. Note that once you've installed such a midi player, to use it you'll have to download the midi file (right-click) and save it to your local hard drive first, and then launch your midi player (e.g. Melody Assistant) and open the file. How to do this is explained in Midi hints.
Cyberbass provides enhanced features for midi files streamed (left-click) from its website. It is extremely easy to use and gives you a few features you don't get with standard streaming players. You can practise with all the vocal parts at the same volume by clicking on "tutti", or with your part amplified by clicking on the relevant link ("soprano", "alto", etc.). You can control the speed of the playback by typing a number in the "NEW Player Controls" box. A little player should also appear to the left of this with a pause button and a slider for moving around in the piece. With MSIE, it should be visible, but with Firefox you might have to download a new plugin to see it. Note that Cyberbass provides streaming only -- you can no longer download midi files from this website.
All the music we are doing this year is available at Cyberbass To find the piece you want, go to Cyberbass, click on "Major Works", scroll down to the composer you want, and select the appropriate piece.
This year everything we're doing is available at John's Midi File Choral Music Site. Click on the link to the Major Works and Anthems composer list and you'll find everything, most likely with full orchestral accompaniment. I've also provided links to each piece below.
John's Midi File Choral Music Site - Messiah Voices with orchestra.
Sylvis Woodshed Scroll down to G.F. Handel, then keep scrolling almost to the end of the Handel section, and you'll see three Messiah links. I like the one by M. Petri the best. This is a zip file so you will need to download it to your hard drive and unzip it.
John's Midi File Choral Music Site - Te Deum Voices with orchestra.
John's Midi File Choral Music Site - Paukenmesse Voices with orchestra.
Choral Domain Public Library - Paukenmesse Voices with organ.
John's Midi File Choral Music Site - Stabat Mater Voices with orchestra.
Choral Public Domain Library - Stabat Mater Voices with organ.