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MP3-Mixing Software (please help)
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| blighty |
Hi there people,
I am still looking for a Mp3-mixing program which is easy to use and has the ability TO SAVE YOUR OWN MIX,..I haven't seen a program what supports saving mixes :-(
Please help me out!
Greetings,
V.
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| Morbius |
If you have two soundcards:
get a 1/8th audio cable, use it to connect the line out on the card that goes out to your speakers, and connect the other end to the line in on the other soundcard, then use cooledit/whatever other program to record.
If you have one soundcard:
buy a second one, it sucks to mix without it 
or you can just do the same, but have the line out going to the line in on the same card (should work, havent tried it though) |
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| blighty |
Thanx Morbius,.as the matter of fact,..I have an audio cable here,..cool
One problem though,...If I listen to the next record to even the BPM,..the program will record this interference too,..won't it.
Or can I do something with recording channels,..I would really appriciate it if you could tell me what's possible, and what's not
Greetings,
V |
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| Morbius |
Sure thing, if yer mixing with 2 seperate soundcards its pretty easy to set up cuz all you have to do is take the line out from the card that goes to the speakers (ie. has what you'd want the "audience" to hear) to the line in on the card that has the headphones connected (as long as that card can record + play at the same time.)
It'd be a bit trickier with 1 sound card. If you have some audio thingy that splits the speaker out on the soundcard to left and right (speakers and headphones), then the you'd only want to record one channel of the line out, obviously. Sooo.... either get another thingy that splits it into left + right channels, or just record both and edit it in whatever audio editing program you're using.
Ok, I hope that made sense, I'm still not fully awake  |
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| blighty |
Hi There Morbius,
Thanx again for the info,..I'll try to get a thingy otherwise,..otherwise the 2 cards solution will be the solution..
Greetings,
Blighty  |
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| blighty |
wow,
otherwise - otherwise
solution - solution
no,..I do not like reapeating myself 
Greetings,
V 
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| Interceptor |
| You really don't need 2 sound cards. I'm using 1 and i can save my own mixes. (Using SB LIVE). For Example, if i'm using Virtual Turntables, I can record the session with another program like sound forge or another recording software. |
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| Morbius |
But the mix is only in mono, right?
Or did you somehow hook it up so the rear channel is headphones and the front is speakers? Hmm that'd be nice! |
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| Kurve |
| Try ATomixMp3!!! it matchs beats for ya and everything...not like the other dj programs where you cant really record a set you made ... unless you have some massive set up for a couple sound cars..... this one is farely easy!!! ....its the new version of Virtual-Dj ver 1.2....NOT!! Virtual Dj Studio!!!.. ..thats the best program i have found to record your own mixes on teh computer if thats what you want to do then its the program for yoU!!!! |
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| Aviston |
| In order to record your mixes with one soundcard you need a soundcard that supports full duplex. Which, simply stated, means that the soundcard can play and record at the same time. |
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