Tutorial - Recording audio playing on the computer

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This tutorial outlines solutions for recording audio playing on the computer, (for example, audio being streamed from an Internet website). How or if you can do this depends on your computer operating system, your audio interface and its drivers.

Advice Copyright or website restrictions may prevent you recording or distributing material. Check first.

Tip Quality:

Generally, it is better to extract or import audio from CDs, DVDs or existing video or audio files than record them as they play. Recording from an analog audio interface is relatively inexact and lossy because the digital source is converted to analog to play it, then back to digital to record it. The resulting quality will depend (amongst other things) on the quality of your audio interface's digital to analog and analog to digital converters.

  • To extract audio CD tracks to your computer, see Audio CDs.
  • To import additional types of audio file or extract audio from video files, download and install FFmpeg, then import the file. FFmpeg can also extract audio from the individual VOB files stored on unencrypted DVDs.
Tip Backups:

If you have just made a recording it is strongly recommended that you immediately export your audio using File > Export Audio to WAV or AIFF (ideally to an external drive) as a safety copy before you start editing the project.

Step 1: Set up devices to capture computer playback

This is often the hardest part of the overall task, being dependent on your computer operating system and audio interface. Many manufacturers are making it increasingly difficult to record streaming audio by deliberately removing or hiding this functionality due to copyright concerns. Sometimes, older audio interface drivers can be found on the website of the audio interface, sound card or motherboard manufacturer that still allow recording of computer playback.

This section of the tutorial shows how to find a suitable audio interface input for recording computer playback, with workarounds if such an input is not available. Click the link to the tutorial for your operating system:

Step 2: Turn Enable audible input monitoring off

Enable audible input monitoring must usually be turned off when recording computer playback. If playthrough is on, the audio interface will try to play what it is recording then re-record it, creating an increasingly loud series of echoes that may damage your equipment.

To turn off Enable audible input monitoring, choose Transport > Transport Options > Enable audible input monitoring to conveniently toggle playthrough off and on as required.

You can also use the Recording section of Audacity Preferences:

Preferences Recording.png
Advice

If you are recording computer playback with Soundflower on Mac you must keep Enable audible input monitoring on.

Step 3: Monitor and set initial sound levels

Before recording for real, try to set sound levels by playing similar material from your intended source and monitoring it in Audacity, so that the recording level will be neither too soft nor so loud as to risk clipping.

To turn monitoring on and off in the Recording Meter Toolbar:

  • Left-click in the microphone icon or right-click in the Recording Meter and select "Enable Silent Monitoring" to turn monitoring on. Click again to turn it off.
StartMonitoring w7 210.png

The aim is to adjust levels so that the long colored bars in Meter Toolbar do not exceed about -9.0 to \xe2\x80\x936.0 dB (or 0.5 if the meters are set to linear rather than dB). You can always amplify the recorded signal later if necessary.

Recording Toolbar in use.png

See Meter Toolbars for a detailed description of what the meter display shows.

Both the output level of the audio you are recording and the level it is being recorded at will determine the achieved input level of the recording. Thus to achieve the correct recording level you should use both the recording and playback level sliders on Mixer Toolbar:

MixerToolbarWithoutInputSelect.png

and probably the volume control on the website or player software as well. It may be best to check that the Audacity playback slider and the website or player slider are turned up by about the same amount, rather than having one output slider way down and the other way up.

Tip Always keep an eye on the Recording Meter Toolbar bars to make sure they do not actually reach the right edge, or the red hold lights to right of the meter will come on, indicating clipping distortion in the recording. Enlarging Meter Toolbar by clicking and dragging the right-hand edge may help with this task. See Resizing and Undocking.


Step 4: Make a test recording

Make a test recording to refine levels if necessary.

Start the audio playing on the computer then click the Record button Image of Record button in Transport Toolbar. Record for long enough to find the loudest likely part, then click the Stop button Image of Stop button.

Have a look at the recorded waveform - there should be no clipping visible. Clipping is bad - this is when the volume of the source sent to Audacity is louder than Audacity can record. The result is that the tops and bottoms of the recorded wave are chopped off ("clipped"). The illustrations below show about 0.004 seconds of a properly recorded waveform then a clipped waveform. You will need to zoom in to inspect the waveform as closely as this, but extended lengths of clipping will also be visible at lower zoom levels.

A properly recorded waveform
Waveform.png
A clipped waveform
Waveform clipping.png

You can also check for clipping by choosing View > Show Clipping in Waveform from the menu. Audacity will display vertical red lines in the waveform wherever it detects any clipped samples.

ShowClipping02.png
Show Clipping in Waveform may detect clipping when Meter Toolbar does not, because Meter Toolbar detects only runs of four or more clipped samples.

Any clipping of three samples or less is unlikely to be audible in most recording circumstances, but it is still a good idea to turn the playback or recording level down if you can.

Tip On slower machines it is best to turn Show Clipping in Waveform off when recording for real.

If clipping occurred, turn the recording or output level down a little and try again.

If no clipping occurred you can now Edit > Undo Record from the menu to remove the test recording(s) then make the real recording.

Step 5: Make the real recording

Click the Record button Image of red Record button in the Transport Toolbar then start the audio playing on the computer. Continue recording for as long as you want, but keep an eye on the "disk space remaining" message (in the Status Bar at the bottom of the Project Window) and on the Recording Meter (to ensure that you are maintaining a good level without clipping).

When you have finished recording, click the Stop button Image of Stop button.

Step 6: Backup the capture

It is strongly recommended that you Export a safety copy of the raw recording in uncompressed WAV or AIFF format. This is particularly important if the recording is a one-off and cannot be repeated. The backup can always be returned to should you make a mess of your subsequent editing. For extra safety or convenience you could also copy the backup to an external drive or a CD - either a data CD for playing on the computer or an audio or "music" CD for a CD player. Find out more at Burning music files to a CD.

At this stage you will probably want to use File > Save Project > Save Project (or File > Save Project > Backup Project for a staged safety copy) before proceeding with any editing. This is useful if you want to come back to editing later on.

Step 7: Editing

For information on editing please refer to Basic Recording, Editing and Exporting

If you have not been able to make a test recording and find that you have some clipping in the real recording then, provided that the clipping is not too severe, you may be able to repair the clipping with Audacity's Effect > Clip Fix. You should use the Clip Fix effect to repair any clipping immediately after recording and prior to undertaking any further editing.