Not true, Bruce. Programs such as Sonar allow you to, for example, record a
piano track today, a flute track tomorrow, etc. After all tracks are
recorded, you can make changes to each track as you see fit. From there, you
can mix it all down to a wav file, MP3 file or some other format. Now, let's
say that you play the audio file and say to yourself, "Oops, that vocal
track is too loud." With Sonar, you can reload the project, lower the volume
on that vocal track and save a new audio version of the project.

With Goldwave, multitracking requires the use of several sound windows.


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