I also have them in a Cubasis project. Now Cubasis assigned the Default MIDI Acoustic Piano, so you’ll have to change the instruments to what you want. The piano, bass, and click track clips came out labeled for you. The other clips I have no idea what instruments were originally assigned to them.
I think you’ll be very pleased! I learned a lot from this exercise, so thanks for the opportunity. Now I know a whole lot more about dealing with MIDI files.
I’ll private message your files to you, out of respect for your work’s privacy.
Whoops, when I sent you the files this morning, this Cubasis forum wouldn’t let me send you the Cubasis project file. It displayed a list of all acceptable file types and .cbp wasn’t one of them. I was too tired to zip the whole thing up, but you should be all set with the Midi track files I sent. They match exactly the tracks that GarageBand imported and displayed from your America.mid. I pulled your America.mid into the 4Pockets Helium app running stand-alone and did all the exporting and track creation in there and I played the tracks and they match exactly what they played inside GarageBand. I did not trim or edit your original tracks in any way. I gave you back exactly what was in America.mid, only track by individual track.
Do you still need to get those MIDI tracks into Cubasis?
If so, here’s some info.
If you’re trying bring in a multitrack MIDI file into a single MIDI track in Cubasis, then there’s your issue. Cubasis is expecting a single track, so at best, that’s all you’ll get is the 1st MIDI track from your file.
Instead, drag it into the blank track (event) area below your other tracks and drag it all the way to left to the start of the 1st measure and drop it.
If the tracks still don’t appear, or not all of them appear, send me your MIDI file and I can probably get your individual tracks out and send them back to you.
If you want to try it yourself, I use the Helium by 4Pockets app in stand-alone mode to do it. I can’t teach you how to do it, as I just figured out how to do it myself and it took me some trial and error and some assistance from the iPad Files app in Slide Over mode.
The part that hung me up was file management in Helix’s Media Bay. The folders (and files) I created there were nowhere to be found in the iPad files system or in iCloud. Something I’ve learned since I did this and have verified its consistency. Put a copy of your .mid file in your iPad at:
/Helium/Songs
Songs are multitrack MIDI files (unless your song is a single MIDI track)
/Helium/Clips
Clips are individual track MIDI files.
That’s what I’ve surmised, anyway.
John
P.S. I’m posting this info in this forum in case it’s useful or helpful to other Cubasis users.