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Audio Conversion

Convert MIDI to OGV — Free Online Converter

Convert Standard MIDI File (.midi) to Ogg Video (.ogv) online for free. Fast, secure audio conversion with no watermarks or registration....

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How to Convert

1

Upload your .midi file by dragging it into the upload area or clicking to browse.

2

Choose your output settings. The default settings work great for most files.

3

Click Convert and download your .ogv file when it's ready.

About MIDI to OGV Conversion

MIDI (.midi) files form the backbone of music archives at organizations like the MIDI Association, academic music libraries, and open-source music repositories such as the Mutopia Project. These institutions maintain vast .midi collections representing musical works from classical repertoire to contemporary electronic compositions. The .midi extension is standard in these archival contexts where abbreviated file extensions are considered informal.

OGV (Ogg Video) uses Xiph.org's Theora video codec and Vorbis audio codec within the Ogg container — all completely patent-free and open-source. Converting MIDI to OGV creates multimedia files suitable for Wikimedia Commons, Wikipedia, and other open-content platforms that mandate patent-free media formats for legal compliance with free culture licensing.

Why Convert MIDI to OGV?

Wikipedia articles about musical compositions, instruments, music theory concepts, and composers often need audio examples. Wikimedia Commons — Wikipedia's media repository — requires patent-free formats (OGV, OGG, or WebM) for all uploads. Converting authoritative MIDI renderings of public domain compositions to OGV enables these audio examples to be embedded in encyclopedia articles.

Open educational resource (OER) platforms governed by Creative Commons licensing may require patent-free media formats to satisfy the 'free as in freedom' requirement. MIDI-rendered musical examples converted to OGV meet this standard while providing actual audio playback rather than relying on the reader's (often nonexistent) MIDI capabilities.

Common Use Cases

  • Creating audio examples from public domain MIDI scores for Wikipedia music articles
  • Uploading MIDI-rendered classical music to Wikimedia Commons for encyclopedia use
  • Producing patent-free audio examples from MIDI for open educational resource platforms
  • Building Creative Commons music libraries from synthesized MIDI with OGV as the distribution format
  • Preparing MIDI-rendered musical concept demonstrations for open-access music theory textbooks

How It Works

FFmpeg synthesizes the .midi events through a SoundFont engine to produce stereo PCM audio. For audio-only OGV, the PCM is encoded using libvorbis and wrapped in an Ogg container with the .ogv extension. For proper OGV with a video component (required by some Wikimedia upload policies), a single-frame Theora video stream is added — typically a score excerpt, composer portrait (public domain), or musical diagram. The Ogg container serializes the Theora and Vorbis streams using page-level multiplexing with proper chaining semantics.

Quality & Performance

The Vorbis audio within OGV at quality 6 (~192 kbps) delivers excellent fidelity for synthesized MIDI content. The Theora video component (if included) is typically a static image and does not require high quality settings. For Wikipedia audio examples, clarity and accuracy of the MIDI rendering matter more than sonic beauty — use a General MIDI SoundFont that represents instruments in their standard timbral character rather than an artistic SoundFont that colors the sound.

FFMPEG EngineFastMinimal Quality Loss

Device Compatibility

DeviceMIDIOGV
Windows PCPartialPartial
macOSPartialPartial
iPhone/iPadPartialPartial
AndroidPartialPartial
LinuxPartialPartial
Web BrowserNoNo

Recommended Settings by Platform

Spotify

Resolution: N/A

Bitrate: 320 kbps

OGG Vorbis preferred

Apple Music

Resolution: N/A

Bitrate: 256 kbps

AAC format required

SoundCloud

Resolution: N/A

Bitrate: 128 kbps

Lossless FLAC/WAV for best quality

Podcast

Resolution: N/A

Bitrate: 128 kbps

MP3 mono for spoken word

Tips for Best Results

  • 1Use a neutral General MIDI SoundFont for encyclopedic renders — accuracy to standard instrument timbres matters more than artistic interpretation
  • 2Include the SoundFont name, version, and license in the Wikimedia file description for reproducibility and attribution
  • 3Add a public-domain score excerpt image as a Theora video stream for richer Wikipedia article integration
  • 4Keep audio examples under 60 seconds for encyclopedic use — brief, focused excerpts serve readers better than full performances
  • 5Consider uploading as .ogg (audio-only) rather than .ogv unless a visual component genuinely adds value

MIDI to OGV serves the specific requirement of patent-free multimedia for Wikimedia, OER platforms, and open-content archives. It enables MIDI musical content to reach Wikipedia's billions of monthly readers.

Frequently Asked Questions

Wikimedia Commons accepts .ogg (audio-only) and .ogv (video). For pure audio examples, .ogg is preferred. Use .ogv only when a visual component (score excerpt, diagram) accompanies the audio.
Vorbis quality 5-6 (~160-192 kbps) is standard for Wikimedia audio. Higher quality adds file size without meaningful benefit for encyclopedic audio examples played through typical browser speakers.
Yes. Wikimedia Commons now accepts WebM (VP8/VP9 + Vorbis/Opus). WebM is technically superior to OGV and is increasingly preferred for new uploads.
The MIDI rendering creates a new audio fixation. The composition itself may be under copyright even if the MIDI file is freely available. For Wikimedia, use MIDI of public domain compositions (pre-1928 in the US, or as applicable in your jurisdiction).
Include SoundFont credits in the Wikimedia file description page. If the SoundFont is Creative Commons or GPL licensed, proper attribution is legally required and good practice regardless.

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