![]() ![]() Last Edit: 14:12:16 by pianoplayer88key.(However, if that means I can't IMPORT more than 16 pre-recorded tracks. So in that case 12 channels (would that be 6 tracks?) is sufficient for now. I only have six 1/8" jacks on my comp's motherboard, however each can be set as line-in, line-out, speaker out, mic in, etc, independently - they don't have to be assigned to the "defaults". I downloaded Kristal but have yet to figure out how to use it. (About the in-progress piano music album - the equipment I now have seems to be working well enough - maybe it's that I've figured out how to use my Zoom H2 and Audacity effectively, and the piano's in excellent condition, especially for its age.) :| (But, while I'm not making money from what I'm doing with this, nor expecting to make money, I would prefer to spend (or not) my money accordingly. At the rate I'm raking in the dollars from my not-yet-finished piano music album that I'm in the process of recording with a Zoom H2 and a Baldwin Hamilton piano, that may as well be several years or decades. I would be willing to invest some $ in some good software around the time I buy better quality audio hardware, seeing as I would like to sometime do some professional recordings, but that's still at least a year or more into the future. In this particular case, it's a project I'm doing for free for my family. I prefer the hardware costs to be an even tinier fraction of the money I expect to actually make from selling finished copies (or whatever it is) (and that's assuming it's a bad enough commercial failure to make the Guinness Book of World Records in a category like "commercial failures so bad they can never again be matched, let alone bested") I generally like to spend no more than a small fraction (of the hardware costs) on the software I use for a project, how do you call $50 an "absolute steal"? especially considering: The newer versions of GW, like 5.x or something like that, are time limited.)īut. (The version of Goldwave I use, after you use certain commands a particular # of times per session, nags you with a popup screen about every other time you use one. in that case, seeing as I also use an older version of GoldWave (4.26), which is also nagware, I could try reaper I guess. Kristal Audio Engine could be what you're looking for, I've never tried it though and from the feature list it looks quite limited compared to Reaper. Quote from: danbee on 13:23:12 Also, the demo is fully featured and not time limited so you can pretty much use it as long as you like without paying, although you will get nagged for 5 seconds every time you run it. Last Edit: 07:22:47 by pianoplayer88key.Thanks to the unidentified mod who edited my topic, or was it automatically fixed somehow? Somehow the word "FREE" was omitted from the topic title, though. (A friend of mine uses SONAR, but it's $619 over my budget.) Is there some other program I could download, or is there a plugin for Audacity that will enable simultaneous multi-track recording? I would like to use Audacity, but it only seems to support recording 2 channels at a time. I'm running Windows XP Home SP2 on a 2.1GHz dual-core AMD CPU with 2GB RAM, and slightly over 1TB HD capacity (using 3 HDDs). What free software can I download that will do this? When I plug separate audio sources into each jack, I'd like each one to go on a separate track, not all get mixed onto one stereo track. ![]() My computer's on-board sound has 6 jacks in the rear, each of which (up to all 6 simultaneously) can be set as "line-in". I have Audacity, but it can only record 2 channels (1 stereo track) at a time. I'm looking for some good free (NOT trialware) simultaneous multi-track recording software. somehow the topic title got truncated It was supposed to be "good FREE(!) simultaneous multi-track audio recording software? (I have Audacity but it only supports 2 simultaneous tracks)"
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