You've misinterpreted me, but I'm not interested in an argument. I was
agreeing with you in the first place and we can leave it at that.
<SMILE>

Bruce


On Wed, 13 May 2009 16:54:46 -0400, "Christopher Wright"
<[email protected]> said:
> 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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> [email protected]
-- 
  Bruce Toews
  [email protected]


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