Aria Maestosa is a midi sequencer/editor. It lets you compose, edit and play midi files with a few clicks in a user-friendly interface offering score, keyboard, guitar, drum and controller views.
Git repository: https://github.com/ariamaestosa/ariamaestosa
Features
- Import and play MIDI files
- Easily compose and edit music
- See and use musical score notation, as well as piano roll, tablature and/or drum views
- Print musical notation (only in version 1.2+)
- Record from a MIDI instrument (only in version 1.3+)
License
GNU General Public License version 2.0 (GPLv2)Follow Aria Maestosa
You Might Also Like
Our Free Plans just got better! | Auth0 by Okta
You asked, we delivered! Auth0 is excited to expand our Free and Paid plans to include more options so you can focus on building, deploying, and scaling applications without having to worry about your secuirty. Auth0 now, thank yourself later.
Rate This Project
Login To Rate This Project
User Reviews
-
Excellent project in version 1.4.13. Just need a few enhancements to become the perfect tool for MIDI composing.
-
My focus is on Guitar Tablature view and MIDI processing. Aria Maestosa provides the best ease of use among all guitar tablature editing software. The application is compact and most short cuts are similar to those I use on Pro Tools and assume other DAWs. I tested extensively the handling of MIDI files produced by Pro Tools. It did the best job among all major apps in mapping midi to the most common sense tabs on a guitar. While it had an issue initially printing the Tabs, Mathieu Marcotte-Gagnon jumped on it and provided me with updated download build that fixed the issue. The only feature I would wish for is vertical zoom (or at least few discrete font sizes) for the tabs (only horizontal zoom is supported) as the fret numbers are small for my elderly eyes.
-
Thank you very much for the program released under a free open source license!
-
Very nice layout and everything seems to work correctly. Unfortunately it cannot save as MIDI or export to MIDI. You can import a MIDI file, but after all the editing, you will never get a MIDI file back. I asked the developer about it, and he said that it was simply not intended to export to MIDI. Curiously, however, there is a Mac version of this same program, and the Mac version allows you to export to MIDI. So, why would he design the one to export to MIDI, but not the other? I have used this program for hundreds of hours on the Mac platform, but I find the Windows version relatively worthless, only because it cannot export to MIDI.
-
Very user friendly and powerful.