Hey Dobro

  • Thread starter Thread starter chrisharris
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chrisharris

chrisharris

King of Bling
You know that question that comes up about 2x a week about Track 1 recording on Track 2. Could you possibly post the answer to that as a Sticky in this forum? In fact, a FAQ sticky would be very useful. It doesn't have to be very comprehensive to start with, b/c we all recognize the questions that come up a lot, and we could just add to it as we go.

I'm not a huge fan of stickies, but I AM a big fan of FAQ's, and this forum is old and big enough to benefit some folks, I think.

thanks,
chris
 
Can you find me an example offhand where the answer's clear and easy to understand? Slack told me how to do stickies one time back in the day, so I *should* be able to do it lol.
 
Lol - this worked for me. :D

Does this sound like you?

"I recorded track one (music) in the multi-track. Then when I tried to record track two as a separate vocal track, I found that it also recorded the music with it at the same time. This keeps happening!! What can I do?"

Well, you're not alone. If you're using a standard windows soundcard (essentially, ANY Soundblaster, SBLive or compatible, Crystal Audio, ESS, Soundmax, or even some other cards from Turtle Beach) the remedy is changing the input/output settings in your Windows Mixer. Here's how...

In any version of Windows that you have:
- Dbl-click on the yellow (or grey) speaker icon located on the lower right
hand corner of your screen.
- Select Options, Properties.
- In the "Adjust Volume for" area, select Recording.
- This will show you all the devices you can record from, in the
"Show the following volume controls" window.
- Make sure all the devices have a check mark in them.
- Click on OK.
- At the bottom of each recording device, there is a check box
with "Select" to the right of it. Use this to select the recording
device that you want. (if you're recording from Line In, choose LINE. If you're recording from Mic In, choose MIC, etc)
- Make sure the recording Volume is at least half way up.
- Minimize the "Recording Control" window.
- You are ready to record.

Now, if you still have bleed, it's possible that you've either selected something like 'WAVE' for your input device, or perhaps 'Mixed Output' or 'What You Hear'. The latter settings essentially lump ALL audio fed through the soundcard into Adobe Audition. The 'Wave' setting will do exactly what is described above - cause the playback track to be recorded with the overdub track.

If you're using a more pro-level card, chances are it has it's own mixer panel (and thus, is not controlled by the Windows Mixer).

Some cards that have their own mixers: Midiman/M-Audio (Delta series, Audiophile, etc), Echo (Layla, Mona, Gina, etc), Aardvark, Lynx, Frontier Designs, MOTU (828, 2408, etc)...
 
Nice job on the sticky, lol.

Thanks. Nice to have responsive moderation.
 
Oh, I respond. Not always intelligently or gently though.
 
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