Need help with recording level
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Please state which version of Windows you are using,
and the exact three-section version number of Audacity from "Help menu > About Audacity".
Audacity 1.2.x and 1.3.x are obsolete and no longer supported. If you still have those versions, please upgrade at https://www.audacityteam.org/download/.
The old forums for those versions are now closed, but you can still read the archives of the 1.2.x and 1.3.x forums.
Need help with recording level
I'm new to Audacity, so sorry if this is a dumb question.
I just downloaded Audacity, hooked up my mixer to the computer and started recording karaoke singing.
I noticed that the recording monitor meter hits the red line constantly and the recorded sound was very distorted, I kept turning down the recording level until it gets constantly below the yellow lines, the sound is no longer distorted but the recorded volume is extremely low: 0.04, anything higher will hit yellow and red.
Is there any way to increase the recording level without having distorted sound?
Thanks
I just downloaded Audacity, hooked up my mixer to the computer and started recording karaoke singing.
I noticed that the recording monitor meter hits the red line constantly and the recorded sound was very distorted, I kept turning down the recording level until it gets constantly below the yellow lines, the sound is no longer distorted but the recorded volume is extremely low: 0.04, anything higher will hit yellow and red.
Is there any way to increase the recording level without having distorted sound?
Thanks
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kozikowski
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Re: Need help with recording level
Stop using your computer's pink Mic-In connection?
Unless you have a really special machine, Windows computers don't have good (or any) stereo recording connections.

The Mic-In connection is usually mono, many times pink, nearly always very high gain, delicate and very easily overloaded.
I use a Behringer UCA202 stereo to USB adapter. I have two.

The UCA202 also has a headphone connection and is certified for perfect overdubbing. That is, the ability to hear yourself in real time while you're singing to the music on the computer.
Koz
Unless you have a really special machine, Windows computers don't have good (or any) stereo recording connections.

The Mic-In connection is usually mono, many times pink, nearly always very high gain, delicate and very easily overloaded.
I use a Behringer UCA202 stereo to USB adapter. I have two.

The UCA202 also has a headphone connection and is certified for perfect overdubbing. That is, the ability to hear yourself in real time while you're singing to the music on the computer.
Koz
Re: Need help with recording level
I used the "Line in" port, not the mic, I'm not sure if it makes any difference.
Thanks for your suggestion about Behringer UCA202, I will look it up.
Thanks for your suggestion about Behringer UCA202, I will look it up.
Re: Need help with recording level
Thanks Koz, this device has line in and out, can I use it to do both input and output on the same computer? I.e. use the Output to play music into the Mixer for Karaoke, and use the Input for Recording from the Mixer? Or it's better to have Output from 1 computer and Recording to another computer?kozikowski wrote:I use a Behringer UCA202 stereo to USB adapter. I have two.
The UCA202 also has a headphone connection and is certified for perfect overdubbing. That is, the ability to hear yourself in real time while you're singing to the music on the computer.
Koz
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kozikowski
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Re: Need help with recording level
When I did my Skype/Podcast experiment, I played show music (intros, outros, themes, bumpers, stingers, etc) from iTunes in the computer into a sound mixer. At the same time one output of the mixer (the show) was going the other way back into the computer to be recorded in Audacity.
You do have to pay attention to program hotkeys and application management. In English, a hotkey for the music playback isn't also a hotkey that Audacity uses. I was using two computers. The other was running Skype. Skype does not play well with others.
But yes, no question the safest way is use two computers.
Listening to yourself performing music is not easy. That's called Zero Latency Monitoring. In general you can't listen to the computer. Your microphone has to go into the computer, into Audacity and then come back out again for your headphones. That takes time. It can give give you you a a bad bad echo echo. That doesn't happen if you listen to the Behringer assuming your voice in entering the computer that way. This doesn't work with USB microphones. They have to have their own monitoring such as the G-Track.

I call it perfect overdubbing because you hear in your headphones a perfect, mixed version of the overdubbed show. If you stopped performing with that layer, that's exactly the show that everybody else is going to hear.
Overdubbing in Audacity stacks your voice in individual stripes as you record. The main timing track, the alto track, the bass track, the tenor track, etc. This allows you to filter, effect, manage, etc each track until you get the composite sounding good. Audacity will mix the whole thing down to a single sound file when you export.
Koz
You do have to pay attention to program hotkeys and application management. In English, a hotkey for the music playback isn't also a hotkey that Audacity uses. I was using two computers. The other was running Skype. Skype does not play well with others.
But yes, no question the safest way is use two computers.
Listening to yourself performing music is not easy. That's called Zero Latency Monitoring. In general you can't listen to the computer. Your microphone has to go into the computer, into Audacity and then come back out again for your headphones. That takes time. It can give give you you a a bad bad echo echo. That doesn't happen if you listen to the Behringer assuming your voice in entering the computer that way. This doesn't work with USB microphones. They have to have their own monitoring such as the G-Track.

I call it perfect overdubbing because you hear in your headphones a perfect, mixed version of the overdubbed show. If you stopped performing with that layer, that's exactly the show that everybody else is going to hear.
Overdubbing in Audacity stacks your voice in individual stripes as you record. The main timing track, the alto track, the bass track, the tenor track, etc. This allows you to filter, effect, manage, etc each track until you get the composite sounding good. Audacity will mix the whole thing down to a single sound file when you export.
Koz
Re: Need help with recording level
Thanks for your advice Koz, I'll stick with 2 computers and will buy the Behringer UCA202 for recording.
Re: Need help with recording level
I just bought this device, hooked it up, works exactly like what you described, however I also have to set the Recording Level to 0.04 or below, otherwise the sound gets really distorted. Are there other setup in Audacity that I need to adjust?
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kozikowski
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Re: Need help with recording level
I need to post when I get home with my notes. Do have Windows 20dB boost set by accident? Windows has the oddity of being able to change the volume of a USB data stream...and not tell you.
Koz
Koz
Re: Need help with recording level
There's no setup for 20dB boost for this recording device (Behringer UCA202), see the sound setup belowkozikowski wrote:Do have Windows 20dB boost set by accident?

Below is the recording level at 0.12, totally distorted:

And at recording level 0.04:

At 0.04 most sounds are somewhat ok, but I find a lot of vibration for the voice. Much worse than recording through the PC built-in "Line In", I thought the Behringer device should provide improvement over the PC built-in device, but it's actually worse for my case. Any advice?
Re: Need help with recording level
Did you have a look at the “Listen”, “Levels”, “Advanced” tabs of the “Microphone Properties”?