MIDI
2,260 matches found
Available at:N. Olmsted, OH
Condition: Excellent
Available at:Hickory Corners, NC
Condition: Excellent
Available at:Southfield, MI
Condition: Excellent
Available at:Springfield, NJ
Condition: Excellent
Available at:Springfield, NJ
Condition: Excellent
Available at:Twin Cities, MN
Condition: Excellent
Available at:Independence, MO
Condition: Excellent
Available at:Flint, MI
Condition: Excellent
Available at:Florence, KY
Condition: Excellent
Available at:South Springfield, MO
Condition: Excellent
Available at:Little Rock, AR
Condition: Excellent
Available at:Atlantic City, NJ
Condition: Excellent
Available at:New Braunfels, TX
Condition: Excellent
Available at:Orange, CT
Condition: Excellent
Available at:Greenwood, IN
Condition: Excellent
Available at:Oxford Valley, PA
Condition: Excellent
Available at:Greenwood, IN
Condition: Excellent
Available at:Bridgeton, MO
Condition: Excellent
Available at:South Springfield, MO
Condition: Excellent
Available at:Cincinnati, OH
Condition: Excellent
Available at:Visalia, CA
Condition: Excellent
Available at:Lake Forest, CA
Condition: Excellent
Available at:Cool Springs, TN
Condition: Excellent
Available at:Villa Park, IL
Condition: Excellent
Available at:Totowa, NJ
Condition: Excellent
Available at:Oxnard, CA
Condition: Excellent
Available at:Hollywood, CA
Condition: Excellent
Available at:Moreno Valley, CA
Condition: Excellent
Available at:Emeryville, CA
Condition: Excellent
Available at:Northridge, CA
Condition: Excellent
For DJing or controlling special effects, a pad controller is a great choice. For playing a wide variety of instruments, especially digital piano, a keyboard controller is the right tool for the job, be it live or in the studio. You can also pair the keyboard with a pedal controller for an authentic digital organ. There are even wind controllers for saxophonists and other woodwind players, which enable you to accurately replicate breath and embouchure techniques that a keyboard can't capture. You can use any of those MIDI controllers with a hardware sound unit—but if you're using software solutions instead, you will also need an interface. MIDI interfaces allow you to connect controllers directly to your devices. There are even iOS interfaces which, together with a MIDI app, can turn your iPad or iPhone into a pocket-sized portable recording studio. In addition to hardware and software interfaces, available alongside them are an assortment of routing boxes for wiring and managing even the most complex MIDI device configurations.
No matter how simple or how complex your MIDI setup needs to be, you'll find the controllers, utilities and interfaces that you need to get it up and running. Whether that means full-sized studio components or compact portable devices to take to live shows, it just comes down to choosing the hardware that best suits your needs.