Recording Internal Sound

eapgeek

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Hey guys. I want to be able to record stereo sound using Audacity. I know how to do it on XP, but can't on Windows 7. Currently in Audacity I can record sound from my mic, but not stereo. Can anybody help?

EDIT//


For anyone else with this problem, I found the solution.

Go to the "Sound" console in the control panel.

Switch to "recording" tab.

It should have something like "microphone", "microphone array", and "rec. playback". The last one is your sound card. Just set that as the default device under the recording tab.

Now Audacity should record system sounds.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Dell Inspiron Custom Build
OS
Windows 7 Premium
CPU
Intel Dual Core 2.2ghz T6600
Memory
4GB
Sound Card
Creative X-Fi Soundblaster
I'm not really sure but I think there's a Stereo Mixer option somewhere in the sound settings. It should allow you to record what you hear. I'll check if I can find it.
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7 Ultimate 32-bit
CPU
AMD Athlon(tm) 64 Processor 3700+ ~2.2GHz
Motherboard
Asus A8N-E
Memory
2,5GB
Graphics Card(s)
Sapphire Radeon 5750 1GB
Monitor(s) Displays
Acer AL1916
Hard Drives
Western Digital Caviar 500GB,
Western Digital Caviar 80GB,
Samsung Spinpoint 80GB
I see you have an Inspiron, Which model desktop? With that SoundBlaster Xfi sound card you may not have the What You Hear (what Soundblaster calls the System Mixer) that you need to be able to record streaming audio from the Internet. I do a lot of support on the Dell users forum and there are a lot of issues getting the Dell OEM Xfi cards to work in Windows 7. SoundBlaster is not supporting Windows 7 on all models of the Xfi cards - just the current production models - but some users on the Dell forum have reported using the Retail SB Win 7 drivers and getting it work - but not all have been able to get the What You Hear function. If you have Win 7 64 bit, SoundBlaster has an Xfi Beta driver that users have reported to work.

The What You Hear may not be displayed in the Recording Tab. If not, RIGHT click in an empty area on that panel then LEFT click to display disabled devices. If your lucky What You Hear will now be displayed and you can select that to be the default recording device (and be able to record streaming audio).
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
My Own Build
OS
Windows 10 64 bit
CPU
Intel i7 6700K
Motherboard
ASUS ROG Maximus VIII Hero
Memory
16GB Corsair Dominator
Graphics Card(s)
Intel CPU Graphics
Sound Card
RealTek
Monitor(s) Displays
27" Dell S2719dgf
Screen Resolution
2560X1440
Hard Drives
1 TB Samsung 850 EVO SSD for Win 10 Pro
500GB Samsung 850 EVO SSD for Win 10 Insider
2 TB drive for backup
PSU
EVGA Supernova 750G2
Case
BeQuiet Silent Base 600
Cooling
Deepcool Captain 120EX
Keyboard
Microsoft Wireless 2000
Mouse
Microsoft wireless
Internet Speed
100 MB/sec (Cable)
Antivirus
Microsoft Defender and Malwarebytes
Browser
Edge/Firefox
Other Info
Cakewalk (Sonar) by BandLab and Studio One 4.1 Pro recording studio software. MOTU 896Mk3 Hybrid recording interface, Frontier Tranzport wireless control unit, Behringer X-Touch Control Surface.
Five USB connected optical drives for CD Audio production using Nero BurningROM
@Fireberd its actually a laptop.

And you are right, what you hear wasn't under the Recording tab. And I did the disabled devices thing.

But as I said in OP I got it to work. Just had to set the Sound Card as my default recording device, not my Microphone Array.

Thanks to all you guys.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Dell Inspiron Custom Build
OS
Windows 7 Premium
CPU
Intel Dual Core 2.2ghz T6600
Memory
4GB
Sound Card
Creative X-Fi Soundblaster
A BIG Thank You to fireberd!

Thank you very much
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
HP
OS
Win7 64bit
CPU
AMD Phenom(tm) II x4 820
Memory
6GB
Sound Card
Realtek High Def. Audio
Monitor(s) Displays
1
Kujisha, sounds like you got it working, Great!
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
My Own Build
OS
Windows 10 64 bit
CPU
Intel i7 6700K
Motherboard
ASUS ROG Maximus VIII Hero
Memory
16GB Corsair Dominator
Graphics Card(s)
Intel CPU Graphics
Sound Card
RealTek
Monitor(s) Displays
27" Dell S2719dgf
Screen Resolution
2560X1440
Hard Drives
1 TB Samsung 850 EVO SSD for Win 10 Pro
500GB Samsung 850 EVO SSD for Win 10 Insider
2 TB drive for backup
PSU
EVGA Supernova 750G2
Case
BeQuiet Silent Base 600
Cooling
Deepcool Captain 120EX
Keyboard
Microsoft Wireless 2000
Mouse
Microsoft wireless
Internet Speed
100 MB/sec (Cable)
Antivirus
Microsoft Defender and Malwarebytes
Browser
Edge/Firefox
Other Info
Cakewalk (Sonar) by BandLab and Studio One 4.1 Pro recording studio software. MOTU 896Mk3 Hybrid recording interface, Frontier Tranzport wireless control unit, Behringer X-Touch Control Surface.
Five USB connected optical drives for CD Audio production using Nero BurningROM
Playing around with sony vegas 10 pro and audacity I just did moments ago figure out stereo mix for my CLARO Halo sound card running under windows 7.

In my case the trick is to select line in as the recording source in the 7 sound panel and card's software. Then stereo mix is also selected on the card's software. Audacity is told to map to CLARO HT Line 1. Line 1 is out put from a mixer I have connected to a turntable and wireless mike.

hmm i need to try all this out on a site like stickam or LV which is where I really want to send multiple sounds too. Somehow I bet the logitech wbcams built in usb mike may not work the same hmmm and what abt it working right with yahoo messenger.

computer sound is entirely too complex for something that ought to be easy---sending 2 or 3 sounds at once over the internet.
__________
ok the stickam test is done. The above selections on the CLARO software panel are good to go I believe. On the stickam panel that comes up to select the cam and sound I picked my logitech webcam---for the mic I thought for sure I'd have to pick stereo mix or line 1 (CLARO). But a test record of a "show" demonstrated I could hear my mic but only very very faint music--I guess that the mic was picking up. So I went back to panel and selected WAVE for the mic---did a test record of a "show" and viola. The music almost drown out the mic so I still have to figure that out. Sliding the level down on the logitech panel in stickam might turn down mic too--so maybe the answer is to crank mic sound up even more on mixing board. Getting there slowly..lol.
 
Last edited:

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Custom build; parts from the Egg
OS
windows 7 Professional 64 Bit
CPU
I7-3930
Motherboard
Asus P9X79 PRO
Memory
G.Skill 4X 4 GB DR3 240 pin 16GB total
Graphics Card(s)
EVGA 670
Sound Card
Energy Take 5, Sennheiser HD 205 phones, X-FI
Monitor(s) Displays
Hanns G 21.5" HH221 and Samsung 19" 940BW and Hannspree
Screen Resolution
2X 1920X1080 and 1X 1440X900
Hard Drives
3-- internal 250 GB WD; 1-- internal 1 TB Samsung ---plus 3 WD external HDs (sizes vary to 1.5 TB); Crucial M4 128GB SSD, 1 Pioneer BDR-207 Bluray writer;
and 1--LG Lightscribe DVD drive
PSU
1000 Watt XFX Pro Series
Case
Thermaltake Chaser
Cooling
Corsair H80
Keyboard
Logitech Wireless and backlit
Mouse
Logitech Rollerball
Other Info
79 " long desk from Ikea. Sauder 71 inch long "speaker" shelf.

Optical and analog outs to a Yamaha RX-V 650 driving Energy Take 5.1 speaker system. Technics TT. Realistic mixer. Senns cans.
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