So Audacity could now appear much worse than previous releases, when in actual fact:
If it sounds like recording is skipping, or small fragments are sometimes missing, this means that Audacity cannot write the audio to disk fast enough to keep up with what it is recording. You may not hear skips while listening during the recording, but you will hear them on playback.
Audacity settings
On Mac using Mavericks or later, it may be necessary to reduce audio to buffer, possibly to zero.
Computer and hardware
There are many possible actions you can take. Some may have no effect on a skipping problem, others may have a cumulative beneficial effect, so try them all
On Windows systems, you may receive "Error while opening sound device" when you try to record. This typically happens when you first use Audacity for recording and have no audio input devices (or only the built-in microphone) showing in Audio Setup Toolbar. See Error opening sound device for more details on this error.
If your Audio Host is not already set to MME (the Audacity default) in Audio Setup Toolbar, try changing it to MME as this host is the most compatible with all audio devices.
To investigate this further, exit Audacity then on Windows, right-click over the Speaker icon by the system clock and choose Sounds the click the Recording tab. Follow the steps on Windows: accessing the Windows Sound controls to show then enable all disconnected and disabled recording devices.
Many new Windows laptop, notebook or netbook computers only have a single audio input port. This will often be a mono port only meant for microphones. On some machines this single port may also be able to accept stereo line level input which is essential to record from standalone cassette decks or home audio systems. However the stereo quality or separation may be poor. See "How to connect your equipment" before connecting high output devices to a sole input.
Windows 10 privacy settingsFor some users Windows 10 is now blocking Audacity from using the microphone, on the basis of privacy settings (and this can also affect non-microphone devices). After upgrading to version 1803, some users have been reporting that the microphone is getting detected, but it does not pick up any sound.
In order to get around this issue, Microsoft recommends that you need to enable the microphone in your Privacy settings using these steps:
See this Microsoft website for more details.
You may also need to do this if Audacity was working on Windows previously but you now get the "Error opening sound device" message.
A problem of no recording level in Audacity is occurring quite frequently on Mojave and Catalina, due to Apple changing the Privacy settings for recording devices (making it more conservative, "safer"). Note that, although macOS refers to this setting as Microphone, it applies to all recording devices, including external USB / Thunderbolt interfaces.
To fix this problem:
There are several possible fixes.
Built-in audio devices
Generally, if you connect a cable to one of the inputs of the built-in audio device, Audacity will be able to record immediately from that device. If not:
On systems with only one audio port for both input and output, you may need to change the output to an input. On Windows you can do that in the audio interface's own control panel. On Mac, use the Input tab of "Sound" in System Preferences and change the "Use audio port for:" menu to "Sound Input".
External audio devices
Audacity does not automatically search for new external playback or recording devices (such as headsets, turntables or microphones that connect by USB cable) if you connect these while Audacity is already running. To solve this, make sure the device is detected by the operating system, then either restart Audacity or use Transport > Rescan Audio Devices in the Audacity Menu Bar.
For most larger audio interfaces it is essential that you install the latest drivers and/or firmware for your operating system from the interface manufacturer's site. Otherwise, the device may not be detected or may not work correctly. |
To listen while Audacity is recording, enable what is known as software or hardware playthrough as explained below. If you use Audible input monitoring and want to listen to the input without recording it, you must also left-click in the Recording Meter Toolbar to turn on monitoring.
In the Recording section on the left, put a checkmark in the Audible input monitoring box and click OK. You can also turn Audible input monitoring on and off in the Transport > Transport Options menu. This type of playthrough has latency, so you will hear what you are recording a noticeable time afterwards. You could also experience audio breakup.
Audible input monitoring usually causes a delay (latency) of the live recording input due to the time it takes to reach your headphones. To prevent this, turn Audible input monitoring off. This can be done most conveniently by choosing Transport > Transport Options > Audible input monitoring and clicking it to remove the check (tick) mark.
To listen to the live recording input without playthrough latency requires hardware monitoring - that is; the input signal must be routed directly through the audio device from the input to the output rather than being passed through software from input to output.
Enabling hardware monitoring is not possible with all audio devices. In particular it can only be achieved when the same device is used for input and output. For example, monitoring a USB microphone through headphones that are plugged into a different audio device will always have latency. If hardware playthrough is not available with your hardware it may be necessary to listen to the audio source directly (acoustically) rather than through the computer.
For some typical examples of how to set up equipment to record without playthrough latency, see this Tutorial about Recording overdubs.
This issue can occur on newer Windows machines and can occasionally occur on newer Mac computers. These and other symptoms can also occur on other machines if the sound device is applying an effect or a corrective enhancement.
Unwanted fading or poor quality can sometimes be caused by inappropriate or outdated sound device drivers.
When you make an overdub recording (listening to an existing track while recording a new one), computers cannot lay down what you record at the exact instant you sing or play in response to the beat. Therefore without intervention, the recording inevitably gets laid down after the beat. Audacity tries to correct for this "recording latency" automatically by pushing the recorded track backwards after recording stops, but further adjustment may be needed.
If a new track is not synchronized with the others, you can zoom in and use its Clip-handle drag-bar. to drag the track to the correct location. If you are doing a lot of overdubbing, try our Latency Compensation to set a custom value for Audacity's latency correction which can then be applied in Audio Settings Preferences.
Tutorial - Recording Multi-track Overdubs gives a step-by-step guide for manually correcting for latency.
Recording while playing is much more demanding for the sound device than simply recording. Hardware and sound driver problems or sample rate mismatches between Audacity, the operating system and the sound device can cause poor audio quality or make tracks play and record at different speeds. If a new track is being recorded at a different speed, it will progressively drift apart from the beat of the other tracks, so latency correction will never synchronize it correctly along its entire length.
To fix speed drift, pitch and quality problems, try the following tips.
To fix recordings already made which are out of step with other tracks, you can use Effect > Change Speed and Pitch . Only a very modest speed change will be needed.
The USB connection on electronic keyboards, pianos, drum machines or other electronic instruments is often a MIDI connection containing instructions with which MIDI software like Finale or Cubase can create notes of specific pitch and duration. Audacity cannot yet accept MIDI input, so it can only record an audio signal (the actual sound that the keyboard produces).
If your keyboard manual says you can send audio over USB but there is a problem, try tightening or replacing the USB cable, ensure it is connected directly to a spare USB port on the computer, then restart Audacity or the computer.
In the absence of a USB audio output:
Connecting from headphones out will disconnect the keyboard speakers. In this case you can use an adaptor that doubles the headphones out, or enable Transport > Transport Options > Audible input monitoring in Audacity to listen as you record. See Connecting an Instrument for details and images of suitable audio connectors.
Many new laptop computers these days only come with a mono "microphone" (pink) input which will distort if you connect a keyboard to it. Occasionally the pink input can be switched to stereo line level in the audio control panel or may be "compatible" with stereo line level (this may not be of highest quality). Check your computer manual or experiment connecting from the keyboard headphones out with the volume turned well down. However in most cases it is preferable to purchase a USB interface with line level input instead.
Rather than recording YouTube videos as they play, consider downloading the YouTube videos directly. Search Google or other search portal for how to do that.
If you hear crackles, pops, or distortion when the recording is loud, or if the waveform is clearly touching the top and bottom edges of the track, you probably have clipping, which means that the signal has exceeded the maximum allowed level.
Try lowering the recording level using the Audacity Recording Meter Toolbar or the slider in the operating system. You can also check to see if you can lower the volume on the input source itself (such as the tape deck, record player or microphone). Many sound cards and USB turntables or USB tape decks have an independent volume control for the playback signal level. See Recording with USB turntables or USB cassette decks for more help with USB turntables or tape decks.
When recording, try to aim for a maximum peak of around \xe2\x80\x936 dB in the Recording Meter so as to prevent the meter's red clipping warning coming on. If the meters are set to linear, the equivalent level to aim for is 0.5. Clicking and dragging on the meter's right edge lets you expand the meter to gauge levels more easily. After recording, you can boost the level safely using the Amplify or Normalize effects.
Help with repairing clipped recordings: If there is only a small amount of clipping (just the tops of a few isolated peaks), Effect > Clip Fix can be applied to just the clipped sections. This will attempt to reconstruct the missing peaks by interpolating the lost signal. In other cases where there is mild distortion throughout a recording, using Effect > Filter Curve EQ or Effect > Graphic EQ to reduce the higher frequencies can help to mitigate the damage. Sometimes a bass cut will help also by making the result sound less "muddy".
If you are recording overdubs, note that when multiple tracks are mixed together their volume is combined. This may make the mix clip, even if the individual tracks did not. To fix it, use the Gain/Volume sliders on one or more tracks to reduce the overall level.
This is a visual indication that your recording has clipping. See the immediately previous FAQ above.
The vertical red lines show where the clipping has occurred; these clipping indicators can be turned on and off (Audacity default setting is "off") by selecting View > Show Clipping .
The recording cursor can legitimately appear to be stuck in Audacity if you have accidentally enabled Sound Activated Recording in the Transport Menu and the current recording input is below the threshold level at which recording is set to start. You can tell this is the case because the blue Pause button will be depressed after you press Record.
To disable Sound Activated Recording, click the Transport menu and uncheck Sound Activated Recording (on/off).
To make a Sound Activated recording commence, increase the recording level, or reduce the "Activation level" at Transport > Transport Otions > Sound Activation Level .
Out of resources
If you have not activated Sound Activated Recording and the red recording cursor will not move from the position where you start to record or stalls while recording, this usually means you are out of computer resources. Rebooting the computer may solve the problem.
Note: Windows defaults to shut down performing a "hybrid boot" that retains the kernel session in memory, so producing a "Fast Startup". When you want to replenish resources you should do a traditional "cold boot" (full shutdown) instead, waiting a few seconds after shutting down before powering on the computer.
Leaving Fast Startup enabled, you can cold boot by holding Shift while clicking the "Shut down" menu option from the Start Menu, Start Screen or Win + X menu (on Windows 8.1 only, unmodified click on "Shut Down" in the Win + X menu always performs a full shutdown). If preferred you can turn off Fast Startup at Control Panel (icons view) > Power Options > Choose what the power button does then any Shut Down menu item will cold boot.
For an in-depth approach to resolving resources problems, see Managing Computer Resources and Drivers in the Audacity Wiki.
Preferences
USB turntables and tape decks
Reports of recordings from USB turntables freezing or having dropouts are not that uncommon. Generally they are not caused by Audacity, but by poor quality equipment and cables, or lack of sufficient USB bandwidth.
Generally, if you find you can record into Audacity without interruption from another source such as a microphone plugged into your computer's microphone port, this implicates the turntable or USB cable. To check if other sources record satisfactorily, go to Audio Setup Toolbar and change the Recording Device to your inbuilt sound.
If recordings from sources other than the turntable are also freezing or have dropouts, there could be problems with insufficient computer resources, see above. Please see the Managing Computer Resources and Drivers page in the Audacity Wiki for tips on correcting this.
If you are using "Audible input monitoring", it is also possible that problems with your inbuilt sound device (used to play back your recording whilst you are making it) are disrupting the recording. Please look at our list of tips on the Updating Sound Device Drivers Wiki page for help.
If the red recording cursor moves across the screen but no waveform is drawn behind it (only a flat line), you need to start from the beginning and set up your recording device and input source properly.
Step 1: input device
Select the Recording Device you are using (such as microphone or line-in) in the dropdown selector of the Audacity Audio Setup Toolbar. The dropdown selector you need is the one with the microphone icon.
If you are plugging a microphone or line-in input directly into the jacks on the computer, or recording computer playback such as Internet radio, choose the name of the built-in sound device or sound card.
By default, Windows only enables the microphone input. You must exit Audacity, then go to "Sound" in the Windows Control Panel to show and enable other inputs before you can record from them. Instructions can be found on this page: Windows: accessing the Windows Sound controls.
If you are connecting an external device to the computer, such as a USB sound card, USB microphone or USB turntable, choose "USB Audio Codec" or similar.
Setting sample rates for USB or FireWire interfaces:
It is important to set the same sample rate in the Project Sample Rate ain Audio Settings Preferences, in the operating system mixer, in any settings in the device's control panel and on any controls on the device itself.
Step 2: playback device
Also in the dropdown selector of the Audacity Audio Setup Toolbar select the playback device you are using, usually this will be your computer's on-board sound card. The dropdown selector you need this time is the one with the loudspeaker icon.
Step 3: channels
In the Audacity Audio Setup Toolbar set the Recording Channels to 1 (mono) or 2 (stereo) as required.
Step 4: recording signal level
In the Recording Meter, adjust the recording level using the recording slider (the one that has the "microphone" symbol) in conjunction with the Recording Meter level to set the correct recording level before starting to record for real.
If the Audacity recording slider does not control the recording level of the device, use the slider in the operating system instead. This is usually accessed by a loudspeaker icon near the system clock.
Further Help
Audacity writes to disk roughly every 6 or 12 seconds, depending on your preferences settings. If you hear a funny noise in the background that is relatively consistent every 6 - 12 seconds, it means that your sound card is picking up the noise from your hard drive.
See Improving recording quality in the Audacity Wiki, because you will probably need to find a better driver or upgrade your hardware.
Also consider however if a security application could be scanning Audacity's disk writes. If so, the noise could come from increased CPU activity as a result of the scan. You should not turn off security applications unless you are disconnected from the Internet, but you may be able to add an exception to the application so that it does not scan Audacity or its temporary folder.
This can occur when connecting to one channel only of a device that has separate left and right channel inputs. Recording in mono will often result in a half-volume track that cannot be made louder without adding distortion. If this happens:
Ensure Audacity is set to record in stereo using Audio Setup Toolbar. Your recorded track will then say "Stereo" in its Track Control Panel and two channels, left above right, will be displayed when you press the Record button.
Also ensure that the Recording Device is set in the system mixer to record in stereo and that the left and right channels are balanced.
Ensure that any balance controls on your mixer, amplifier or record player/cassette deck are centrally placed.
For non-USB recordings, make sure you are using a clean, tightly connected stereo plug. Ensure that the computer port you are connecting to is stereo. Most microphone ports are mono. A laptop that only has a single input will usually offer only low quality, poorly separated stereo when using a stereo plug. You can buy modestly priced, decent quality USB interfaces with line level stereo input if needs be.
If your source is mono but Audacity is set to record in stereo, it is often best to change Audacity to record in mono using Audio Setup Toolbar. Otherwise, you may have a silent right channel (or sometimes two identical channels, according to the sound device).
If you cannot prevent the imbalance at the input stage, you can correct a stereo imbalance using the Normalize effect after the recording has been made.
This will adjust the volume of each channel independently so that both have the same maximum (peak) level (in our example, the peak is 6 dB less than the distortion level).
Custom balancing
Sometimes the track may still sound louder in one channel than the other, even after normalizing. This usually happens because of the content. For example, one channel may have more deep bass sounds which are naturally louder, or one channel may be mostly quiet but have one loud peak.
To adjust each channel to its own peak volume, click the downward-pointing arrow in the Track Control Panel to open the Audio Track Dropdown Menu then choose "Split Stereo Track". Click on "Left" in the Track Control Panel of the upper track to select it, then use Effect > Amplify and choose your required New Peak Amplitude. Click OK, then amplify the right channel to your chosen New Peak Amplitude. To rejoin the channels into one track, use the Track Dropdown Menu again and choose "Make Stereo Track".
Custom rebalancing can also be carried out during playback while the track is split into two channels, using the Gain/Volume Slider on each channel. This method can lead to distortion, so check that the Playback Meter does not show the red clipping indicator. As soon as you are happy that the balance, use Tracks > Mix > Mix and Render to render the gain changes and rejoin the stereo track.
If the sound remains unbalanced due to a few loud peaks, you could instead use Effect > Compressor on the unsplit stereo track to reduce the difference between loud and soft.
Cause and impact
This off-setting of a signal from zero is known as DC offset. A signal with DC offset would appear in the Audacity default Waveform view as not centered on the 0.0 horizontal line.
A sound that has DC offset will not be at its loudest possible volume when normalized or amplified (because the offset consumes headroom). This problem can possibly extend to the mix as a whole, because a sound with DC offset and a sound without DC offset will have DC offset when mixed.
DC offset can cause clicks at the start and end of the audio or audible distortion after running effects. DC offset can also cause inaudible low level distortion which becomes audible after applying a filter or if the audio is exported to a compressed audio format.
You can use Effect > Normalize to remove DC offset. Put a check mark in the Remove any DC offset box but leave the Normalize maximum amplitude.. box unchecked and then press the OK button.
Hardware upgrade
The usual cause of DC offset is a faulty or inadequate audio interface. It may be worthwhile considering upgrading your computer's built-in sound card or purchasing an external audio interface. However recent built-in sound cards on Windows machines sometimes have a DC offset cancellation control which can be set for each input.
This usually happens with Punch and Roll recording if you have not measured that latency of your computer with Audacity and made the latency correction. See the Latency Compensation page on the Muse Support site for details.
Recording using headphones rather than loudspeakers can also help avoid this.