

Not too long ago I stumbled upon a print-out of that story and it made me long to hear these MIDIs one more time.Īfter several extensive Google searches yielding nothing, I forgot about for a couple years until this morning when it randomly popped back into mind and I decided to give it one more goand then your post popped up, and it was exactly what I had been searching for.

I would listen to them over and over and once even wrote a story for my second grade class with these tracks as the soundtrack. I remember being 7 years old and playing with the computer, I found the MIDI tracks. Growing up, our first family computer was win95 which we soon upgraded to win98. Maybe nice is the bonus music and passport, I think best from these. I have to say, excellent quality, and it does give you a different perspective of the pieces. The MIDI file is meant to be looped, which is why the ending sounds abrupt.). It was included in Windows since Windows 3.1 (maybe earlier) up to but not including Windows XP.įlourish stemmed from the music of the Internet Explorer 4 Channels. It has been described as being less bad than the previously included MIDI files, and I think Ill agree with that. One Stop is the longest of the MIDI files in the media and features the most instruments. Raymond Chen says that theyre from WinXP, but I remember seeing it in WinME, so Im going to say theyre from Win98. Ive tried searching for the composer, but without success (apparently, George Stone knows nothing about it). It kind of sounds like the background music for a DOS game, like Commander Keen.

This was one of two files (the other being CANYON.MID) included to promote Passport Designs. The SoundFont used to render the MIDI file is indicated after the filename.
