RECORDING VOCALS AFTER RECORDING MUSIC

I recently created a song with software instruments. I then got a microphone and connected it so that I can record some vocals over the music. Unfortunately I can't seem to hear the beat on my headphones while I record the vocals. There is no sound. Neither is their sound from the Mac itself when I have the microphone on and the headphones unplugged. How do I get around this? Do I need to buy an interface to do this kind of project?

USB Condensor Mike.
(mic)
http://www.bulletsandbones.com/GB/GBFAQ.html#usecomputersspeakers
(Let the page FULLY load. The link to your answer is at the top of your screen)

Similar Messages

  • How can I get my (vinyl) record music into iTunes Match?

    I have a rather large collection of music on CDs, Tapes, and records.
    Now that iTunes Match exists I would like to include all of my music into my iTunes library.
    There is no easy way (that I know of) to load anything except CDs into iTunes. So for the rest of the library one must either buy all the music again or buy equipment to play the music one time and convert it to a newer format.
    My CD collection is mostly loaded and since 99.999% (virtually all) of that music is already in iTunes Match it is not uploaded to iTunes again, but it quickly becomes available to play on all my iTunes Authorized Devices.
    With the exception of that 1 in ten thousand songs that I may have that iTunes does not have in the Match library there is no reason to import the music at all - other than to prove I have the actual CD's. (In any case I suppose I could have borrowed them for that anyway.)
    However for CDs at least they can be imported - but for tapes and records I know of no direct way.
    With something state-of-the-art like iTunes Match and my PC(s), iPhone(s) and iPad, why use stone-age-like means to prove ownership of outside-of-iTunes music?
    Why not provide some other information to identify albums owned and have them available in iTunes Match without the 99.999% useless step of loading them?
    In fact for most tape music it is no longer playable (to convert) as the rollers in the tape devices deteriorate and they no longer play.
    Vinyl records play just fine, just not easily into a PC without purchase of expensive equipment that would be used only for the one-time load (which is really just for proof-of-ownership).
    What a ridiculous waste of time, energy and funds for that 1 in 10,000 songs that may not yet exist in the iTunes Match library. Okay, as the music gets older it may even be 2 in 10,000 - but I doubt it.
    I remember that each album (and 45 rpm single) has identifying information scratched into it (around the inside of the innermost track) - can that (or something else) suffice as proof of ownership to get the music into iTunes Match?
    Please respond with ideas to quickly and easily get already-owned vinyl record music into an iTunes Match library.
    I personally do not care if 1 (or 2) out of 10,000 of my songs gets lost because it is not in the iTunes Match library - couldn't be that good in that case anyway.
    Thanks!!

    I too have not figured out how to convert my vinyl collection to iTunes match. Here is what I have tried:
    I record my vinyl records onto CD using a Sony RCD-W500C which makes a very high quality recording. I make sure the song lengths are the same as those from the same album at the iTunes store.
    Then I import the CD into my iTunes music library. I have to enter the names of the tracks manually because Gracenote cannot identify the names of the songs. I do this while the music is in my iTunes music library and the CD has been ejected from my PC.
    Then I try to get the iTunes Match, but it never works. I do, however, get the artwork from iTunes. iTunes then uploads my songs into the iCloud. When I download them back onto my PC and iPhone 4s, I get the identicle recording that I imported onto iTunes. I know this because I can hear the static and crackling of the vinyl. I don't necessarily mind that noise, but I figured if I paid for the iTunes Match I should get the AAC 256 bps music. After all it doesn't cost iTunes anything to give it to me. And there's no way I'm going to purchase all my vinyl records again. I have about 500 albums.
    I do buy all my new music from iTunes because I think it is the best system available. I just think it could be so much better if they would let me download the highest quality recording of the music I own from them.
    I have also tried the Sony Sound Forge Audio Studio which records my vinyl records into a music file on my PC. But that doesn't get the match either.
    THERE HAS TO BE SOMEBODY OUT THERE THAT CAN TELL US WHAT ITUNES MATCH LOOKS AT IN OUR MUSIC UPLOADS THAT DETERMINES WHETHER THEY GIVE US THE MATCH!!!!!!
    When you download a CD, there is some information embedded in the CD that iTunes matches. I don't believe there is any information embeded in the vinyl albums, but when I burn them onto a CD-maybe I could add the info onto the CD before trying to match it if I just knew what they looked for.
    I would appreciate any help anyone can give me on this.

  • How do i make a still image (photo) fit the length of the music? I record music and want to put the tracks to a video file with a still image of my business logo in the background. Any help?

    How do I make a still image (photo) fit the length of the music? I record music and want to convert the tracks to a video file with a still image of my business logo in the background. On windows movie maker you could just select "fit to music" but this program isnt as easy to figure out! Any help?

    Double-click on the still image in the project timeline to open the Inspector. In the Inspector, adjust the duration by typing in a new duration to match the length of your music. I think the limit for a still image is 10 minutes. If you need more than this, simply drag the image into the timeline again then adjust its duration. The two images will play seamlessly (no gap will be visible).
    See this iMovie Help topic:
    http://help.apple.com/imovie/#mov3a883915
    You can achieve more precision when entering durations by changing a preference in the menu item iMovie Preferences. Check (tick) the preference for Show Time As HH:MM:SS:frames. This will enable you to enter the duration of stills down to the frame level, rather than full seconds (NTSC is 30 frames per second; PAL is 25 fps). When entering times, type a colon between each time segment, such as 2:50:15, which represents 2 minutes 50 seconds and 15 frames. For 5 seconds 20 frames you would enter 5:20 and so forth.
    Note that the music will only run to the length of the video in the timeline (in your case, the still images). So, after increasing the stills duration you will need to drag the end of the music track as far as required. The stills can be dragged inwards to reduce the duration if necessary.
    John
    Message was edited by: John Cogdell - added Note

  • I have just downloaded itunes 10.6 and  in the process my "podcast" option under library has disappeared! The files are still on my laptop. I can also see some of my recorded music in my itunes library but can play them - there is an exclamation mark next

    I have just downloaded itunes 10.6 and in the process my "podcast" option under library has disappeared! THe files are still on my laptop. I can also see some of my recorded music in the itunes library but can't play them - there is an exclamation mark next to each track. Basically I can't use itunes - is the only option remove and replace? Thanks in advance

    Visibility of the Podcasts section is controlled from within the Edit > Preferences dialog.
    Empty/corrupt library after upgrade/crash
    Hopefully it's not been too long since you last upgraded iTunes, in fact if you get an empty/incomplete library immediately after upgrading then with the following steps you shouldn't lose a thing or need to do any further housekeeping. In the Previous iTunes Libraries folder should be a number of dated iTunes Library files. Take the most recent of these and copy it into the iTunes folder. Rename iTunes Library.itl as iTunes Library (Corrupt).itl and then rename the restored file as iTunes Library.itl. Start iTunes. Should all be good, bar any recent additions to or deletions from your library.
    See iTunes Folder Watch for a tool to catch up with any changes since the backup file was created.
    Missing tracks
    Typically this can happen because a file or folder is accidentally shunted to the wrong location. iTunes can also get confused if it expects to be talking to an external drive which isn't there. If will often reset the default media folder location and may have trouble finding files in the old folders.
    Select one of your tracks that is missing in action. Press CTRL-I to Get Info. Cancel when asked to try to locate the file, then look at the location given on the summary tab. This where iTunes thinks the file ought to be? Now find out where it actually is. Post back the two locations for comparison. I should be able to give you some steps to reconnect everything once I can determine which of the things that might have gone wrong is most likely in your case.
    When you get it all working make a backup!
    tt2

  • HT1473 Uploading LP recorded music directly to iTunes

    I record and save music from LPs using an ION turntable.  When saving the music after recording, the music automatically loaded into iTunes and populated the artist, album, and song title fields.  The recent iTunes upgrade does not allow the upload to iTunes anymore and now you have to save to either My Music or the desktop to import.  Has anyone else had this problem and did you find a solutions to uploading your recorded music right to iTunes?

    While we all have MacBooks in this forum not all of us use iMovie. There's an iMovie Support Community where everybody uses iMovie. You should also post this question there to increase your chances of getting an answer. https://discussions.apple.com/community/ilife/imovie

  • The "WHINE"--recording music & Logic

    Hey everyone,
    I just found this website and the guy claims he was able to record the whine using Logic Pro WITHOUT even using a microphone.
    http://web.mac.com/paulthespecialist/iWeb/Paul%20Turner/MacBook%20Pro%20Whine%20 Sound.html
    This is very troubling for me. I have a MBP with the whine and will be recording music with Logic. The thing is, I have learned to “accept” the whine and use various work-arounds (mainly the mirror-widgit and QuietMBP sometimes) to make the whine go away.
    My QUESTION is this: If I record music using Logic AFTER I have stopped the whine using the mirror widget, for example, could the whine STILL be picked up when recording? (Say, somehow internally, or some other way?) This is very important because I bought my MBP solely for recording purposes and I’m getting ready to invest over $5000 on other music equipment to work in conjunction with my MBP. Please, anyone with any knowledge or experience with this, please respond! Thank you.

    It works very well for me, and appears to have had no ill effect on my computer. It's the best solution and is used by many on this forum. So the decision's yours. Until Apple decides to build this fix into OSX this is how we do it...:) It completely distracted me until I found the answer on here. Hope it works for you, should you decide to try it.

  • RECORDING MUSIC ON SATELLITE S55-A5295

    I am currently trying to find out how to record music on my Satellite S55-A5295 and need some guidance. I'm really just looking for an interface and the programming along with it in order to record instruments such as Vocals, Guitars/Bass, Drums and Keyboard. If there is anything extra to add please do so.

    Peter...I hope you are still a moderator...you may be my last hope to help me - Toshiba do the right thing.
    I too have a C55 Satelitte laptop...acutally I purchased it for my 10 year old son. It is one month out of warranty. Last night for the first time, I used his toshiba laptop because I left mine at work. I notice his laptop had this same issue. I spent an hour reading on your forum and trying all the suggestions including the elaborate unplug, remove drivers etc in a particular order and it did not resolve the issue. Obviously this is a defect in this model. My son does not know enough about laptops to even recognize that it is an issue. I have had toshiba laptops for over a decade. I have never had this kind of an issue so I wouldnt even know to look if it was an issue initially.
    It wasnt until last night when I had to use his laptop that I identified this as an issue. No problem, I thought, I'll call tech support and they will do the right thing. No go. I escalated 3 levels and they held their line saying that batteries are consumable and only rated for one year. I have a seven year old toshiba that I use at work that doesnt hold a charge that long but still works!!! This does not work at all - 0%...obviously a defect that unfortuantely my son doesnt have the skill set to have recognized.
    Please Peter, if you are there...can you please see what you can do to have a new battery sent. They are 100.00 which is insulting to pay since it is clearly a defect for this model. Tech support even said as much.
    Any assistance would be greatly appreciated. I have purchased Toshiba laptops for my workplace for over a decade. I am shocked that they are unwilling to do the right thing.
    Thanks in advance.
    Cheryl

  • Beginner! Need help getting started with recording music.

    I am the definition of 'new' at the moment. I want to record my own music at home and I've been told that using an Apple Mac is one of the better ways to go about it at home.
    I have a number of questions, most of which have probably been asked before (apologies!) starting right from the beginning.
    1. What type of Mac would be best suited as a dedicated tool for recording music? Obviously speed and memory are big factors, but are there any other considerations here (available inputs, drivers, sound cards etc)? I'm hoping to keep the cost below AUS$3000 if possible.
    2. Do i need any other hardware for this application? (this is where you can tell how inexperienced I am haha) such as mixers etc? If I should need a mixer, is there a particular type or brand of mixer that works well with Macs?
    3. Will plugging a guitar amp into the mac improve sound quality over plugging the guitar directly into the Mac? I bought a Griggin Garage Band guitar cable a while ago to record some background music for a friend's DVD, and I found it worked well, but I'm looking for the best quality sound now.
    4. What would be the most effective software to use? I've briefly used Garage Band and found that to be simple and useful, but I've heard that there are better software packages available.
    I'm hoping to be able to record guitar, bass and vocals directly on to the Mac, and create drum tracks using samples and loops. I know how to play music but as you can tell I know very little about recording it! Any help or suggestions would be appreciated!
    Thanks..

    I would presume one line level input will suffice?
    Close, you need a Line Level AND Mic Level input since you'll want to record vocals.
    Thanks for the link to your Q&A page, I found some very useful info there.
    It's showing its age, and will hopeful get updated soon, but most of the info is good at least for a background.
    Anyway, I think I might recommend this Presonus INSPIRE over the FireBox, it'll save you about $100 and since PreSonus makes excellent equipment (and we have an active member here that uses the Inspire), I'm confident that it offers great quality.
    I think the firepod that you use looks great, but might be overkill
    I agree, the FirePod would be serious overkill for your needs. Again, an awesome interface, but you'd be paying for all those Mic PREs, and using 1. That wouldn't make sense, and since the FP isn't cheap...
    my talent and engineering knowledge is quite limited
    Then I would strongly suggest GB as the software, and then do lots of reading. The weakest link in music production is your engineering skills. Mixing and Mastering (especially the latter) are art forms. A bad engineer using a $10,000 bit of software and hardware would make a fantastic performance sound like garbage. With good engineering skills you can make a pro recording with GB.
    The learning curve with something like Logic is dramatically increased, and again, without the skills to take advantage of what it offers, your recordings are not going to sound any better. At the very least, start with GB to learn the skills of Recording/Editing/Mixing/Mastering. The "price of admission" is low enough that if in a year you find that you need a feature GB doesn't offer, your money will not have been wasted, it will have been valuable learning time.
    Hope those more specific answers help
    ~~HangTIme [Will Compute for Food] %-)>
    Note: I am an Amazon Associate, if you purchase this item via my link I will get a small commission)

  • Is there some sort of adapter that i can use to plug my electric guitar into, so that i can record music into garage band?

    Is there some sort of adapter that i can use to plug my electric guitar into, so that i can record music into garage band?

    Probably but for that kind of expertise I would ask the experts in the GarageBand forum.

  • How do I get iTunes to provide track names on home recorded music?

    How do I get iTunes to provide track names when I burn a CD of home recorded music?

    Audio CDs do not contain track information. For commercial CDs this information is supplied by the Gracenote service (see below).  Each computer gets this information for a particular CD from this service, it isn't on the CD.  You would have to register your CD with Gracenote.  In my opinion this is a bit much for a personal CD that only a few computers in the world will ever see, but I guess unless they block it then you can do it.
    How iTunes remembers audio CDs - http://support.apple.com/kb/TA27785
    What are all those iTunes files? - http://www.macworld.com/article/139974/2009/04/itunes_files.html - "iTunes Library Extras.itdb contains some Gracenote CDDB information."
    = Registering a CD with Gracenote =
    Stick CD into drive
    In iTunes enter track information by hand
    Advanced > Submit Track name...
    Reference: http://songwrite.wordpress.com/2010/05/28/how-to-submit-your-cd-tracksong-inform ation-to-gracenote-using-itunes/

  • Recording music with MacBook Pro

    Hello,
    Im upgrading but I am unsure whether MacBook Pro will suit my needs.
    I want to be able to record up to 16 channels via a firewire audio interface simultaneously into Logic Pro.
    I currently use an old iBook G4 with a Focusrite Saffire Pro 40 audio interface but the iBook struggles to record up to 8 channels simultaneously. Im guessing this is because of processing power?
    Does anybody know whether MacBook Pro will be suitable?
    Does anybody use there MacBook Pro for recording music?
    Cheers,
    Liam

    I have used my 15" Pro for recording music into soundtrack for some minor stuff but it records just beautifully. I would make sure that you get a Pro that is clocked in at a high processing speed. I would liked to have gotten the 17" since that model also has the extra graphics card (not that you need it for sound). Also make sure that the model you do choose has the right about of pins for the firewire. I believe they have changed since the Macbook models.

  • I'm going to college. Should I get a Macbook Pro13in with the I5 or I7. I play league of legends and record music. my laptop hecka lags so i wanna avoid that. I stream movies all the time. I5 is $1100 and I7 is $1400.i want my laptop to last 10yr  help!:)

    ANY HELP IS APPRECIATED!!! please! the difference between i5 and i7 for me is only $300, but is it durable or worth it in the long run???

    I don't think that you'll get any notebook (or any computer, these days) to last for ten years! I did have a MacBook Pro that lasted me for 6 years, and is still operational, but it simply can't be upgraded any longer.
    If you're going to play games, record music, etc., the dual-core i7 is going to be your best bet, however - well worth the $300 difference.
    Just my 2¢...
    Clinton

  • Plugging power cord while recording music - zero input

    This is a strange problem when recording music via an interface:
    When I am recording sound (Amadeus Pro) via a bus-powered firewire-S/PDIF-interface having my 2012 MBA on battery, and during recording I plug in the power cable, there is a complete zero input for one second or so (shown as -infin dB). Sometimes it goes with digital artefacts. Sometimes this also happens when doing other commands while recording.
    Possible reeasons:
    Core Audio goes down
    power for the external interface goes off
    I never had this problem with my earlier MBP and SL.
    Anybody?

    Hi, Jim. Your guess is exactly correct. The DC-in card to which the port is soldered needs to be replaced. It will probably cost at least a couple of hundred dollars to have a technician replace it, or if you're handy, you can buy a used part and replace it yourself for about half that amount:
    http://www.ifixit.com/Guide/Repair/Installing-PowerBook-G4-Aluminum-17-Inch-1-1- 67-GHz-DC-In-Board/255/1
    http://www.ifixit.com/PowerBook-Parts/G4-Aluminum-17-Inch-1-33-1-5-1-67-GHz-LR-D C-In-Board/IF155-052

  • How do I record music from Itunes to a dvd to play on a Sony DVD player dvp sr500h?

    How do I record music from Itunes to a dvd, that shows it is finishing but will not play on my hardrive or on a Sony DVD player, dvp sr500H?

    If you are burning a DVD directly from iTunes (a feature which is present in older versions of iTunes but which was removed in iTunes 10.4), that creates a computer-type DVD for backup only and cannot play in any DVD player I know of. If you want to create a disk that can play in a DVD player, you'll need to burn an audio CD, an MP3 CD if the player will accept MP3 CDs, or use some other software.
    Regards.

  • Which Canon Camcorder has the best built in microphone for recording musical instruments

    Which Canon Camcorder in the affordable price range has the best built in onboard microphone for recording musical instruments
    Thanks.

    TheBee,
    Thanks for writing!
    The built-in microphones on the camcorder are fairly similar.  When you're recording music, we recommend the use of an external microphone.
    The mic you use really depends on what you're recording and where.
    So we may better assist you, please provide a bit of information regarding the type of recordings you'll be making, the music and the setting (i.e. what kind of venue, your distance to the music, etc).
    Did this answer your question? Please click the Accept as Solution button so that others may find the answer as well.

Maybe you are looking for