Hello,
I am doing some home recording of my guitar. have Windows 10 and Audacity 2.1.3. I have a microphone plugged into an M-Audio FastTrack interface.
I'm recording at 44100 hz, and when I play back what I've recorded it's around a half-step higher than it should be.
Any ideas about what might be causing this issue?
Thanks for your help!
Pitch Change on Playback
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This forum is for Audacity on Windows.
Please state which version of Windows you are using,
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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.
-
intricatelysimple
- Posts: 2
- Joined: Thu Oct 12, 2017 1:56 am
- Operating System: Windows 10
Re: Pitch Change on Playback
My guess is that there's a miss-match in sample rates, and the sound card drivers are not correctly reporting it, so it is not getting automatically fixed.
Check the settings in the Windows Sound Control Panel and ensure that the sample rate there matches the sample rate in Audacity. Try both 44100 and 48000 Hz (the difference between 44100 and 48000 is about a half step).
Check the settings in the Windows Sound Control Panel and ensure that the sample rate there matches the sample rate in Audacity. Try both 44100 and 48000 Hz (the difference between 44100 and 48000 is about a half step).
9/10 questions are answered in the FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS (FAQ)
Re: Pitch Change on Playback
It's kind-of unusual for the sample rate to be wrong (digitally) unless you've got defective drivers. The driver communicates between the hardware & application to (hopefully) keep everything in agreement.
Are you playing back on the FastTrack, or on your regular soundcard?
If you are playing through the soundcard, try the FastTrack. ...If the hardware clocks (oscillators) are off the sample rate will be off and that throws-off the speed & pitch. You won't notice it if you record & play back on the same device, but it shows-up when the record & playback clocks don't match. No clock is perfect, but a "bad" problem like that is usually the fault of your "cheap soundcard", not the external USB interface.
You can also test your soundcard (or interface) by generating a 440Hz 'A' in Audacity (which will be digitally perfect). Then play it and check to see it matches an A on your (properly tuned) guitar. If it plays-back at the wrong pitch, the clock in your soundcard is off (a hardware problem).
Are you playing back on the FastTrack, or on your regular soundcard?
If you are playing through the soundcard, try the FastTrack. ...If the hardware clocks (oscillators) are off the sample rate will be off and that throws-off the speed & pitch. You won't notice it if you record & play back on the same device, but it shows-up when the record & playback clocks don't match. No clock is perfect, but a "bad" problem like that is usually the fault of your "cheap soundcard", not the external USB interface.
You can also test your soundcard (or interface) by generating a 440Hz 'A' in Audacity (which will be digitally perfect). Then play it and check to see it matches an A on your (properly tuned) guitar. If it plays-back at the wrong pitch, the clock in your soundcard is off (a hardware problem).