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Record computer audio using audacity and sound siphon
Record computer audio using audacity and sound siphon















Then when I play my JamMan back over my PA, I add my electric guitar playing and vocal to the performance. So this is the total contents of my backup track-3 parts. What I do is I have only the bass, drums built and acoustic/electric rhythm recorded on the trio+ looper. On your question about sending the Bass/Drums on a separate output/amp from the JamMan? To my knowledge there is no way to do that? The only way I can think of if somehow you recorded stereo parts hard left and hard right to the JamMan Stereo and sent the L/R outputs to seperate amps?

record computer audio using audacity and sound siphon

Does your Trio+ work OK using it that way? So when the song is built at the correct tempo at the 12:00 position, I have no need to slow it down or speed it up. Truthfully I never use that knob because I build all my songs with it set at 12:00 oclock normal speed. Sounds like it's definitely a defect in your Trio+. Sorry you having problems with the Tempo/Audiolastic knob. I created it on a whim but had so much fun with it I saved it and posted it to YouTube. For example check out the bluegrass version of One Headlight that I posted to my YouTube channel. They are cheaper than 400 now.Īlso once you have a song built in BIAB you can change the style just like you can on the trio but the options are nearly endless.

#RECORD COMPUTER AUDIO USING AUDACITY AND SOUND SIPHON PRO#

I bought my dedicated PC, a used MS Surface Pro 4 Tablet that I attach to my mic stand, for 400 bucks off of Ebay about a year ago. When doing this I mute all tracks but the rhythm guitar so I can hear exactly what they are playing. Also with the mixer you can swap in any instrument you want on any of the tracks.like horns for example.ītw.I've started to use the BIAB rhythm guitar tracks to learn new rhythms. With all the instruments unmuted the tracks are simply amazing but I personally want to avoid karaoke stigma for my shows so I try to keep things simple for the tracks I use when playing out. I like to keep my tracks simple so I mute most of the instruments (using the on-screen mixer). Platefireīy default in BIAB when you create a new song or pick a new style for a song there are about six tracks/instruments including one or two rhythm guitars. Don't know if they ever will but if they would read these post, they would know what we want. On the Trio+, it wouldn't bother me a bit if they increased the size of the pedal to add all the features/controls to build more detailed realistic tracks. To me it's great because I can build a pretty decent sounding track very fast. When I switched to the Trio+ I had to simplify my tracks because the lack of controls to do detailed intros, stops, starts, Etc but boy is it a time saver after my previous methods. This process was very Labor intensive and took a lot of time. I still have that original JamMan that I use as a backup to my now main Stereo JamMan. I then went to 8 track Digital recorder, drum machine and myself playing bass & rhythem guitar to record my tracks and transferred them to the first JamMan for performance. I got out of the computer recording after several crashes:>) In the 90's and early 2000's I used to use a Midi/digital recording program called Digital Orchestrator Pro that I combined with Jammer Drum program to build my tracks that worked pretty good. The hardest timing to work on the T+ is 3/4 time for me.

record computer audio using audacity and sound siphon

I usually mix it listening to it through my PA instead of ear phones-it come out better that way. It does take some critical mixing to the JamMan to get your back up track well balanced. I can transfer that T+ track to the JamMan in about 30 minuets. I can build a song track in a lot of cases in an hour and at the most two hours. I use head phones to listen to build the parts. I do all my building/teaching of parts on my acoustic electric. However I've learned to work around the limitations of the T+ and I can knock out a finished track with intro, verses, choruses and ending pretty fast. Don't know why? everybody was waiting, anticipating. I too though Digitech would come out with a more advanced T+ that could do the fore mentioned things, but no. The trio+ is great once you get over its inability to do stops, re-starts, endings or add drum rolls where you want them. I'm the one who preaches using the JamMan to play Trio + tracks back with.















Record computer audio using audacity and sound siphon