go to midi settings and map the channels to the desired synth first, then on the track double click and select the instruments you want to use after setting up the channel
with almost million satisfied orders from newegg how can you go wrong, look at the reviews on newegg on bizrate.com or pricegrabber you will see why you need to prefer newegg rather than tigerdirect. Also if you have any problem with the unit newegg service is the best in returns and replacing.
I bought few mics from Musiciansfriend for my church and had a hardtime returning them, i ended up sending it to akg and they fixed the problem and sent it back. but this was 30 days after the purchase. so be careful how long you use it.
There are many user friendly softwares, also you can put it in this way that once you start using a software pretty much you can figure all the others out in less that two days if you experiment with them. so I would say to get started download trial versions from company websites and tweak it...
First of all you need a mixer to connect all your mics and instruments into, then you take the output of the mixer and connect it into a soundcard (audio interface) which transfers your audio into the computer and then you can record and edit the sound in the computer using a software. so for...
Generally in midi you wont get any latency, the data processed is very less in a midi set up. If you get a latency in midi it is generally a driver problem. You just have to worry about audio latency which undergoes a whole lot of processsing in your computer and audio interface.
Usually people take the mic to some other room or closet near by so computer noises wont really get picked up. You can run xlr wires to any length so the wise thing is to turn one of the closets in to a booth or build a complete isolation chamber for the computer.
I asked the same question about two years back and got great help from this forum. After working with multiple monitors I cannot go back to single one, Now I am planning for four monitors :) (for video editing purpose though)
First of all yes it is a good system to run quite a load. Second it is not just the system that gives you performance you need a good soundcard too. Edirol is fine for single track recordings, I would suggest you get a audiophile or some m audio card which will help you a lot compared to the...
One of my vocal mic xlr cable in my studio from the booth is around 60 feet I guess, and never had any problem with it (I have a pretty thick one). As long as it is xlr it is fine. when it comes to digital cables anything above 10 feet is not recommended, siince it is all 1s and 0s even if we...
Actually you can open a audio clip from Sonar in Audition. They both support directx. Forget recording in laptop and using two computers and all that. Just go to tools in Sonar and see if you see your otehr applications in that, if so click that after high lighting that clip it will open in...
Yes, you can absolutely record in Sonar and edit in Audition. All you need is direct x. When you install them both you will see audition on the Sonar tools list. you can open this same clips in audition and edit it and automatically it will be processed in sonar once you save in audition. Hope...
I dont know any smart or dumb way, but all I can say is use good quality flat response headphones and make sure the talk back microphones are not routed into the printed track. Good luck
make your question more clear please, are you looking for
1. bagpipe audio samples? or
2. a software to record your bagpipe? or
3. Bagpipe midi trigger or something to generate midi through bagpipe?
when you record two mono channels from the same source, you can create stereo. So as long as you have that pan knob you can record stereo, butyou will be using two channels as always. If taht makes it any clear.
you have a nice delta 44 and cakewalk home studio very good choice. Now in the place of the tascam any mixer would do fine. You can still use the tascam if you are ok with it. You can plug in your guitar straight to tascam or if itis acoustic going through a mic into the tascam and then to the...