Garageband No Input Source Selected

Feb 23, 2020 To make a hip hop or rap beat, start by booting up Garageband and opening a new software project. Next, click on “New Track”, then select “Software Instrument” and click “Create” to pick a hip-hop drummer for your drum line. Then, follow the same steps to add a bass line and the lead instrument track. Choose the input source for your guitar Click Setup in the upper-right corner of the lesson window. Choose one of the following from the My Input Device pop-up menu at the top of the window. If you’re playing an acoustic guitar and using your computer’s built-in microphone, choose Internal Mic. Garageband has a feature that I both love and hate – normalization. If you love controlling the output volume of your podcast using Garageband, you’re going to hate it. Normalization takes over on export and adjusts your volumes to optimize (questionable) for playback. Jul 26, 2018 The focusrite device is the selected input source in Preferences, so that's good (ideally Logic would just take system default setting for audio input and not try to override this with the webcam or any of the other ridiculous, perverse setting as the input source).

cure.the.radio

New member
i can't believe i'm trying to get help for this. it's such a simple problem and i'm fairly savvy with audio but this is ridiculous. here's my dilemna,
i'm trying to play my guitar through garage band. i'm using the new aluminum mac book and i hadn't tried this yet because i've been using the condenser mic to just get ideas down. now that i have ideas down sound quality is important and i want to direct inject my electric but it's just not working.
i'm using a 1/4 to 1/8 adapter on the guitar side, through a 1/8 cord into the line in jack right by the headphone jack.
and no sound. but garage band shows the wave forms when i record, yet when i playback nothing. basically no guitar sounds no matter what i do, but it records the waveform and i can see it in the sequencer and the editor. the stereo bars are bumping almost to the red and still no sound.
i've made sure to select real instrument track instead of software track.
i've tried selecting every input source and none of them work, i've cut the line-in input on in system preferences it's turned up and it picks up the sound in there too. there's a little bar that shows how much sound you're putting out and it's bumpin' away but still no sound.
i'm at a loss and i'm dying to get some real recording done. i've tried everything i know to do. i hate to bother with such a simple and fundamental portion of the program and it totally **** with me like this. i have a feeling the problem is really obvious as they usually are but anyway, hope someone can help. thx in advance.

Your Mac is capable of producing sound as well as playing sound channeled from outside sources—devices plugged into the Mac’s USB- and sound input ports as well as audio streamed from the Internet. Wouldn’t it be great if you could captures some of those sounds for later listening? You can. And you can for free with Soundflower. Here’s how it works.

Garageband No Input Source Selected Logic

SelectedGarageband No Input Source Selected

Step 1: Download Soundflower

The first step involves finding a way to grab audio playing in one application—a Web browser, for example—and route it to an application that can capture that audio. Cycling ’74’s free Soundflower is that way. Soundflower is a system extension that lets you channel audio from one application to another. For example, you can take the audio playing from a movie in your Web browser and channel it into QuickTime Player’s audio input where you then record it.

No Input Source Selected Logic Pro X

Step 2: Configure Soundflower

After you’ve installed Soundflower launch the Sound system preference and you’ll see evidence of Soundflower in the Output and Input tabs. Select the Output tab and choose Soundflower (2ch). Do this and any sound that would normally come out of your Mac’s speakers is now routed through Soundflower. Any is the key word here. If your Mac makes any sound—not just the sound you’re trying to capture but also e-mail and Twitter alerts, for example—it will route that too.

Step 3: Configure your capture application

You have a couple of applications on your Mac that can capture Soundflower’s audio—QuickTime Player and GarageBand. To configure QuickTime Player choose File -> New Audio Recording. In the Audio Recording window that appears click on the downward-pointing triangle to the right of the Record button. From the menu that appears choose Soundflower (2ch). When you’re ready to begin your capture, just click Record.

You set up GarageBand by launching the application and in the New Project window that appears choosing Acoustic Instrument. This creates a GarageBand project that contains a single digital audio track. Use the default tempo and time- and key-signature settings that appear in the New Project Template window and click the Create button. Open GarageBand’s preferences, select the Audio/MIDI tab and from the Audio Output and Audio Input pop-up menus choose Soundflower (2ch). Close the Preferences window. If the Info pane for the track doesn’t appear, choose Track -> Show Track Info. In the Browse tab of the Info pane choose Stereo 1/2 Soundflower (2ch) from the Input source pop-up menu. When your Mac makes sound you should see it register in the track’s meters. Click Record to capture the audio.

Step 4: Monitor the Mac’s sound

No input source selected logic pro xSource

When you choose Soundflower as your Mac’s audio output you can no longer hear it through attached speakers or headphones. In order for you to monitor what’s happening, launch the Soundflowerbed application (found in /Applications/Soundflower). Click the Soundflowerbed menu bar item that appears and choose your speakers or headphones from the menu. Now, not only will your audio application capture what your Mac plays, but you’ll be able to listen to the source audio as well. (You may want to do this before setting up QuickTime or GarageBand to capture your audio, but that’s up to you.)

Again, any sound your Mac makes will be channeled through Soundflower so you’ll want to disable alert sounds or quit those applications that make them. Additionally, if you change your Mac’s volume, that change will be captured by the application that’s recording Soundflower’s sound. So, lay off the volume and mute controls.

You can avoid both of these issues by using an application such as Ambrosia Software’s $69 WireTap Studio or Rogue Amoeba’s $32 Audio Hijack Pro. Each of these applications allows you to capture sound from specific applications. You can adjust volume or fire off system alerts all you like and they won’t affect the audio the applications capture. (If you go the Audio Hijack Pro route consider purchasing the $50 Audio Hijack Pro/Fission bundle, which includes the Fission sound editor. WireTap Studio includes an editor.)