Question On Saving Multi-Track Projects To A CD But Keeping The Tracks Separated

Mike Freze

New member
Thanks, everyone, for all your help for this newbee. You've been very helpful so far.

I use Cubase LE and Cakewalk Home Studio for my computer-based, home recording software. I also have a SIAB (Fostex VF160Ex, 16-track, mixer built in) that I play around with, too.

Here's two questions. Outside of the portability of my Fostex stand-alone digital recorder, is there any advantage to using it if I have a laptop computer with my Cubas LE program to work with? That can be portable, too. Any advantage to ever using my Fostex instead of my laptop to record, edit, and mix with? Both are portable, so I'm not sure.

Here's a big question: If I record a multi-track project in Cubase LE (say, 8 tracks), I can save that as a Cubase file and call it up and can edit each track again and again if I choose. When I export it out after mixing as a wav file on my hardrive, ifr I call it up that way back into the Cubase program, it swounds exactly the same except it's all one wav file: no separate tracks to work with unless I call up the original Cubase project; then I can have all the original tracks show up like when I first recorded to edit.

Is there a way to save a recording project with multiple tracks that becomes a wav file (for, say, copying to a CD or playing through your Windows Media player on your computer) so that you still have the separate tracks there (like on a CD) that you could copy to another system, computer, etc. to re-edit or mic later on?

This is an important question because I've had people want to make more elaborate demos of their music (say, a singer/songwriter sending me a CD with only one voice, one instrument). But when I get it, the voice and the single instrument show up as one audio file in my computer (there aren't separate tracks for the vocals and guitar) to call up and edit individually; it's everything on one wav or mp3 file (one track, in other words).
Sure, you can add other tracks later for other instruments or add some effects to what they sent you, but you don't have separate tracks to work with on what THEY recorded.

When I record something in my SIAB Fostex digital recorder, I can record up to 16 tracks there and save it internally in the Fostex system. I can then burn a CD of what I've recorded from my Fostex CD drive. BUT!!!! Can I save my 16 separate tracks as a wav recording, burn it to a CD from my Fostex, and have the recording on that CD be all separate 16 tracks so it could be imported to my computer later and show up in Cabase with all 16 tracks separated like I saved it originally? Or can you only save a recording to a wav format as one final, single track recording with no breakdown of the tracks like before? I know when you "mix down" a recording in Cubase or Cakewalk and then export it as a wav file to your hard drive, you get one final file: no separate tracks to work with.


Any advice you can give me would really be appreciated. I know that on an CD recording in my computer from a famous band (say, the Eagles), whether or not it's from the origianl CD I bought or an mp3 download, both will call up into Cubase and play fine, but it shows up as one file (track); nothing shows up as separate tracks that the artist used to begin with when they made their recording. Therefore, I can't experiment and play around with editing on those songs because it's all mixed down to one mastered file.

Is there any program out there that will "unlock" a final recorded wav file (track) and separate it back to individual tracks for all the instruments like ot was when they originally recorded it before it got mixede down and mastered as a single, wav file on CD?


Mike Freze
 
You can't split an Eagles song into tracks.

You can record multiple tracks into Cubas/Home Studio if you have an interface with multipe inputs i.e. usb/firewire units with 8 ins that actually advertise simultaneous recording on 8 tracks,

Don't know the specs on the Fostex, but I'll assume it's architecture is designed to mix muliplt takes down to two tracks to burn to internal cd. If it has usb, MAYBE you can transfer .wav files to a PC individually, but I'll bet they have proprietary compression on them. I doubt that it stores individual tracks onto a cd for transfer purposes.

Both approaches work fine, depends primarily on portability and stability. The Fostex is hard to beat here. You might get better sound with a firewire interface into a laptop though, and have added flexability at mixdown. Yes, once you've recorded separate tracks (Bass, drums, keys, guitar) into Cubase, you can mangle those files as many times as you want. You should save the entire original project first, and mangle a copy of it. You can make thousands of stereo (two track) mixes of these while retaining the multiple tracks you started with.
 
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