I'm using the latest Cakewalk by Bandlab (and a bunch of old Sonar and other VSTs). I've also searched and read threads about my problem first - but it may be different:
When I listen to my song inside Cakewalk, everything sounds great. When I export it, the WAV file sounds worse (hard to quantify how much worse - some people might not mind - but i definitely notice it) - it's tinny or weird. Kind of like the crash cymbals and highhats and high end are being digitally? compressed? or messed up somehow. It's almost annoying or grating when the high end crashes hit. Like fingernails on a chalkboard to me. So to me it's noticeable and seems like an inferior mix. It's not clipping at the hits (as far as I can tell).
It sounds bad in VLC, Audacity, and DaVinci Resolve (video editor). When I upload to YouTube and playback on my phone it's still there and annoying, but not as grating.
Not sure what the problem is - I've looked through old threads and seen that people say Windows 10 EQs or messes stuff up with default filters. I went into the Win 10 sound settings and turned off the Enhancements and that doesn't seem to make a difference as far as I can tell.
I also reloaded the WAV into Cakewalk - and it sounds ok in there in an audio track - which points to the export being OK. But why if I have Enhancements disabled in the Win 10 Sound settings does the audio sound so annoying on the high end??
And if it is just my playback, then why does it sound bad in video format on youtube (rendered via DaVinci resolve) on a different device? Is Resolve reading the some how secretly filtered audio and then writing that to the .mp4 file I'm uploading to YouTube?
I'm using a super fast Alienware laptop with the stock Realtek ASIO HD Audio output with 16Gb RAM & SSDs and Cakewalk reports it's flying great.
(Yes I know you don't use onboard audio interfaces, but turns out my old Edirol 10in10out FA-101 is firewire - which doesn't exist in Win 10 - so I'm still debating an M-Audio 192/6 or Focusrite 4in4out Scarlett, or a Motu-4... But since I'm just using VSTs at the moment and not recording audio, I figure that should work.
Does it matter that some of these are not routed through busses as I'm just doing some quick & dirty stuff and the mix is good enough in Cakewalk as is.
Sorry for the long post - hope there's enough information for anyone to help or point me in the right direction other than "get a new interface". Because it sounds awesome inside Cakewalk. thanks!
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whipsmart
Hi,
I'm using the latest Cakewalk by Bandlab (and a bunch of old Sonar and other VSTs). I've also searched and read threads about my problem first - but it may be different:
When I listen to my song inside Cakewalk, everything sounds great. When I export it, the WAV file sounds worse (hard to quantify how much worse - some people might not mind - but i definitely notice it) - it's tinny or weird. Kind of like the crash cymbals and highhats and high end are being digitally? compressed? or messed up somehow. It's almost annoying or grating when the high end crashes hit. Like fingernails on a chalkboard to me. So to me it's noticeable and seems like an inferior mix. It's not clipping at the hits (as far as I can tell).
It sounds bad in VLC, Audacity, and DaVinci Resolve (video editor). When I upload to YouTube and playback on my phone it's still there and annoying, but not as grating.
Not sure what the problem is - I've looked through old threads and seen that people say Windows 10 EQs or messes stuff up with default filters. I went into the Win 10 sound settings and turned off the Enhancements and that doesn't seem to make a difference as far as I can tell.
I also reloaded the WAV into Cakewalk - and it sounds ok in there in an audio track - which points to the export being OK. But why if I have Enhancements disabled in the Win 10 Sound settings does the audio sound so annoying on the high end??
And if it is just my playback, then why does it sound bad in video format on youtube (rendered via DaVinci resolve) on a different device? Is Resolve reading the some how secretly filtered audio and then writing that to the .mp4 file I'm uploading to YouTube?
I'm using a super fast Alienware laptop with the stock Realtek ASIO HD Audio output with 16Gb RAM & SSDs and Cakewalk reports it's flying great.
(Yes I know you don't use onboard audio interfaces, but turns out my old Edirol 10in10out FA-101 is firewire - which doesn't exist in Win 10 - so I'm still debating an M-Audio 192/6 or Focusrite 4in4out Scarlett, or a Motu-4... But since I'm just using VSTs at the moment and not recording audio, I figure that should work.
Does it matter that some of these are not routed through busses as I'm just doing some quick & dirty stuff and the mix is good enough in Cakewalk as is.
Sorry for the long post - hope there's enough information for anyone to help or point me in the right direction other than "get a new interface". Because it sounds awesome inside Cakewalk. thanks!
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