Archive for the ‘Cakewalk Sonar’ Category

postheadericon How to setup your Samson C01U or other USB mics in Cakewalk Sonar

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postheadericon Recording with Samson G-Track

Hello
This question came in:
Hello, I have a problem with my cakewalk sonar le, When I playback the audio I have to? unplug the mike in order to hear it on my computer speakers and when the headphones are in it is really quiet playback PLEASE HELP ME!!!!!!

If you are using the G-track, and the output is assigned to the mic, which is an interface within itself, it’s trying to playback through the mic
You could plug your speakers into the output of the mic and play back, because the output will be better than through the standard computer sound card.

Danny
www.dannyjoneline.com

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postheadericon How to export wave in Sonar

Got this question in:

How do I export to an mp3 or wave in Sonar LE.

Answer: To export to mp3, you will need either to buy the Cakewalk mp3 decoder or download the lame mp3 encoder, so my answer will deal with only a wave file. Make sure all the tracks you are mixing are selected, or highlighted
Go to file and export audio…click OK
When the box comes up, make make the file type “wave”
On the left select “What You Hear”, asuming you want to mix what you are hearing, make sure it’s set for stero, 44.100 Hz, and 16 bit if that’s what you want, choose a file name and foilder that you want your file in, and click “Export”
That should do it

Danny
www.dannyjonline.com

postheadericon Samson C01U Great For Voice Talents

The Samson C01U mic is a great choice for the inexperienced recordist. It comes with Sonar LE, a truely professional recording program…this keeps you from having to resort to Audacity, which is the free program that many newbie’s use.
It have many built in effects, and, when you get ready, you can upgrade and already be used to the program.
The C01U is a large diaphram condenser mic, which means you get a professional quality sound, for under $100.
The cool things about this mic is, you can grab your laptop, go on location, plug in the USB cable, and you’re ready to record a podcast, audio book, whatever, with little setup or trouble.
Then you can go home and edit what you’re recorded with the Sonar software.
Cool! I’ve used it just this way for recording audio tours, and the results are terrific!

Danny Jones

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postheadericon Cakewalk Sonar-Fading

Quesiton:

How do you fade out a song when finishing .

Answer:

One way to fade out a song mix:

If you have each track output assigned to the Master Bus at the bottom of
your screen in the bus section. If they are not, or are assigned to something else,
but all on the same one, simply fade the mix creating a volume envelope on that bus track, make your nodes on that volume envelope and fade as you wish.

You can also group all the tracks involved and fade all the volume envelopes at the same time

Danny

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postheadericon Cakewalk Sonar question

Question: 

 

 

 Samson G Track

Samson G Track
Hi, I have a few questions on the samson G track Mic and the program it comes with. When i go to record it only records for a few seconds and then a message comes up saying something about an audio dropout. I was wondering how do i get it to record properly. If u could reply back with some helpful tips i would really appreciate it.
Thanx
_Josh

Answer:

Here are a couple of things to try:
Select Options-Audio, click the Advanced tab, and try different values in the I/O Buffer Size textbox until you find a value that works well for your particular hard disk:

The default value is 64. Try reducing this value, to 32, then 16. After each change, close the dialog box (click “OK”) and re-test your project’s recording/playback behavior.
If problem(s) persist, try increasing this value, to 128, then 256, then 512. Again, close the dialog box and re-try your project after each change.
If you have an older, slower computer or an older, slower hard disk, you should try increasing the buffer size; decreasing is not advised on slower hardware. However, increasing this setting uses more of your computer’s RAM. If you have a smaller amount of RAM in your computer, increasing the buffer size may not help.
If problem(s) persist, restore this value to its default and continue with the next step.

Try higher latency settings:

Select Options-Audio, and click the General tab. Move the Mixing Latency Buffer Size slider control to the right in small increments until you see the value to the right of the slider increase; close the dialog (click “OK”) and re-test your project after each increment.
If problem(s) continue, move the slider control back to its original position, and try increasing the number in the Buffers in Playback Queue textbox. (This value starts out at 4; try increasing it to 5, 6, 7, or 8). Close the dialog (click “OK”) and re-test your project after each such change.
The total effective latency is displayed below the slider; it is determined by multiplying the per-buffer latency time (in msec) by the number of buffers in the playback queue.
If problem(s) continue, click the Advanced tab in this dialog, and turn off the WavePipe Accelerator checkbox. Click OK to close the dialog and re-test your project.
If problem(s) persist, turn the WavePipe Accelerator checkbox back on, and continue.

Mixing latency may be set too low

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postheadericon Samson C01U/Sonar question

Question: When I record with the stereo setting on a track in Sonar using my Samson C01U mic, one side has a lower setting than the other…is there something wrong with my mic?

Answer: No…your mic has only one signal since it’s mono. You should record in mono because there isn’t but one signal coming into your mic.

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