Hi
I'm Trying To Record 2 Different Guitar Parts On Audacity
I've Recorded The First Guitar But When I Record The Second Guitar, I Want To Be Able To Listen To The First While I'm Recording
Anyone Know How To Do This?
I Did It Once By Accident But I Cant Do It Again
How Do I Record And Listen At The Same Time?
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If you require help using Audacity, please post on the forum board relevant to your operating system:
Windows
Mac OS X
GNU/Linux and Unix-like
If you require help using Audacity, please post on the forum board relevant to your operating system:
Windows
Mac OS X
GNU/Linux and Unix-like
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FlamingIceCubez
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Re: How Do I Record And Listen At The Same Time?
Hi, the only way i know is to listen to the original recording through headphones, whilst playing second track. Mind you, i am refering to recording vocals.
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FlamingIceCubez
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Re: How Do I Record And Listen At The Same Time?
Nope, Headphones Are Useless
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kozikowski
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Re: How Do I Record And Listen At The Same Time?
It's a setting in Audacity and it's slightly different depending on your computer, but I would totally use headphones anyway.
Before I dig for it, please be clear that single computer management of multi-track sound is always going to have "Latency." Even if you do manage to record multiple tracks one after the other, they will probably not overlay perfectly without sliding one or the other sooner or later on the timeline. You can minimize that effect by recording all the parts against one sync track instead of using that last track to record the current one.
Audacity Preferences > Audio I/O > Those Little Boxes At The bottom. Pick the ones that give you the least damage. The delay and damage will never hit zero. Also, if you're on a Windows machine, the Windows Sound Control Panel will get into the act, too.
Koz
Before I dig for it, please be clear that single computer management of multi-track sound is always going to have "Latency." Even if you do manage to record multiple tracks one after the other, they will probably not overlay perfectly without sliding one or the other sooner or later on the timeline. You can minimize that effect by recording all the parts against one sync track instead of using that last track to record the current one.
Audacity Preferences > Audio I/O > Those Little Boxes At The bottom. Pick the ones that give you the least damage. The delay and damage will never hit zero. Also, if you're on a Windows machine, the Windows Sound Control Panel will get into the act, too.
Koz
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FlamingIceCubez
- Posts: 4
- Joined: Wed Dec 31, 2008 12:10 pm
- Operating System: Please select
Re: How Do I Record And Listen At The Same Time?
kozikowski wrote:It's a setting in Audacity and it's slightly different depending on your computer, but I would totally use headphones anyway.
Before I dig for it, please be clear that single computer management of multi-track sound is always going to have "Latency." Even if you do manage to record multiple tracks one after the other, they will probably not overlay perfectly without sliding one or the other sooner or later on the timeline. You can minimize that effect by recording all the parts against one sync track instead of using that last track to record the current one.
Audacity Preferences > Audio I/O > Those Little Boxes At The bottom. Pick the ones that give you the least damage. The delay and damage will never hit zero. Also, if you're on a Windows machine, the Windows Sound Control Panel will get into the act, too.
Koz
How Do I Get To Preferences?
And What Do You Mean By "Least Damage"?
Re: How Do I Record And Listen At The Same Time?
"Edit" menu > select "Preferences" (short cut Ctrl+P)FlamingIceCubez wrote:How Do I Get To Preferences?
See here: http://audacityteam.org/help/faq?s=reco ... ulti-trackFlamingIceCubez wrote:I've Recorded The First Guitar But When I Record The Second Guitar, I Want To Be Able To Listen To The First While I'm Recording
9/10 questions are answered in the FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS (FAQ)