These are just general observations, not legal advice.

 

I am fairly sure that under U.S. law there is copyright in a MIDI file only to 
the extent that it represents a creative expression. That creative expression 
would still be present in an audio file, so the copyright would persist. If the 
MIDI file is a literal translation of a piece of public domain sheet music, 
then there is no creative expression to copyright. But most MIDI files you 
would want to make an audio file from have probably had at least some 
performance type nuances added, such as dynamics, phrasing, etc. That is enough 
to be a creative expression. Making an audio file from a MIDI file is really no 
different than making an audio file from a recorded performance for copyright 
purposes.

 

Hope that helps.

 

From: fluid-dev [mailto:fluid-dev-bounces+jim.henry=sbcglobal....@nongnu.org] 
On Behalf Of Cory Gledhill
Sent: Monday, January 22, 2018 2:51 PM
To: fluid-dev@nongnu.org
Subject: [fluid-dev] Audio files copyrighted.

 

Hello,

I know this is not a legal forum. Does anyone know if audio files created via 
fluidsynth and soundfonts are still copyrighted by the owner of the midi 
copyright?

Thanks,

Cory

_______________________________________________
fluid-dev mailing list
fluid-dev@nongnu.org
https://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/fluid-dev

Reply via email to