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Cakewalk Recording Problems


ijustwanttomakemusicPLEASE

Question

Hello.

I am trying to record acoustic guitar. One mic from my pc mic, and one from my phone mic. 

The screenshot shows the PC recording (top track) cutting off for no reason.

This has happened multiple times and there's no indication while it's recording it will cut off whenever it wants . 

Why is this program like this.  Someone explain.  I'm about ready to move to another DAW (other issues too which aren't relevant here I'm very sick of).

cakewalk is fucking shit.png

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Welcome to the forum.
Ensure that all the devices and Cakewalk by Bandlab are using the same sampling rate and bit depth.
You probably need to use WASAPI Shared Driver mode. Speaking of which, can you post some pics of your Preferences? And the tracks's Track Panes to indicate what the ins and outs are? 
Plus, if you want to make music and not become aggravated every time you try to blend different devices and sources and mics and driver modes, you probably need to look into getting an audio interface to plug your real recording microphone into. 
Good luck!
 

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This is Digital Audio 101 and you will encounter the same issue with any DAW software.

- Digital recording into any device requires setting the sensitivity of the analog input to not clip the A/D convertor.

- The iPhone is likely automatically compressing the analog input to avoid clipping the convertor or just isn't as inherently sensitive as your PC mics.

- You need to lower the input sensitivity/level of you PC's mics under System > Sound in Windows.

- A dedicated audio interface will have front panel knobs to adjust input sensitivity.

Note that Gain level in the track only affects soft synths and recorded audio. The DAW has no way of controlling the sensitivity of analog circuitry in front of the A/D converter.

P.S. You can actually see that the iPhone recording is compressed (in the analog realm) as the quieter sections have a higher amplitude than the PC recording even though the loud sections are not clipped. The dynamic range between quiet and loud sections has been reduced. This is often desirable for various reasons, but in the digital audio world, you want to record without compression to get the greatest possible dynamic range in the raw recording and apply compression non-destructively as desired after the fact by digital signal processing.

 

Edited by David Baay
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Hey guys,

Thank you for replying.

You're all really answering my question though. The top track is just me pressing record on a computer and then it turns out it cuts out at around 20 mins for no reason. I hit record, and then it stops recording for no reason. It also doesnt tell me when its stopped recording randomly, so I can never know until I record what I want, then find out it didnt record the last 10ish minutes when cakewalk was showing it as recording.

Thanks.

Thoughts?

@David Baay @Sock Monkey @57Gregy

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Bottom line is Cakewalk/Sonar/ Cubase/ Studio one / Pro Tools and so on are Daw’s designed to be used professionally using proper audio equipment. 
Use Garage band  or the Bandlab app if you’re not that serious about recording using the proper gear which is an audio interface and studio quality mikes and speakers. Those apps are designed to work with consumer devices. Cakewalk isn’t. 
 

It rarely will go smoothly otherwise. 

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