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Forum: Old versions

Topic: Recording w/ tcvs...1 year later....

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LoL, it's been a year and I still have not resolved my recording problems. I'm sure you could find numerous posts from me on this subject. While i'm playing my mp3s w/ VDJ on my laptop hooked up to the MAYA44 which is hooked up to my turntables and mixer. Now I've recently got a new laptop, so now i have two laptops...can i just put the master line out of my mixer into the new laptops input, and record w/ vdj on that new laptop??
 

geposted Thu 05 Apr 07 @ 12:07 am
If you have a decent recording programm. Yes you should

I use (older one but still good) Cool edit pro.

Basiclly a multi-track recording studio type program - allows for multiple tracks, recording with appropriate settings, waveform editing, re-sampling. - and a partidge in a pair tree.

Plus reverb

Search the net find one that works for you.
 

if i understand your goal is to record your mixes right?
why you need 2 laptops for it?
you can just plug your output from your mixer to your line in of the onboard soundcard of your laptop i mean the one that you play music with.
then go on record settings and on souncard select your onboard souncard and your line in.
(this settings will appear when you select line in as your source )
dont forget to turn on the line in of your souncard trough your sound properties.
 

gluzantzas answered your question. I have the same setup and same primary Maya soundcard. I have another Creative SB Live 24 soundcard I use as my recording soundcard. (you could use your onboard laptop s/c as well) I use the booth output (some mixers label it record) and that output goes to the Creative soundcard. Then in windows under control panel > audio, you can select which soundcard you want to use for recording. There I select Creative soundcard. Output is selected as Maya (or device on usb which it is labeled in windows) I use the software that came with the Creative soundcard and it records just fine. You can use just about software at that point. I've used Nero in the past as the recording software. If you have some type of production software like Nero you can split your mix into tracks (so it is more CD friendly and you skip tracks vs. one long mix). Good luck, sorry it's been a year so far.
 



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