If your sound card is in a PCI slot on the motherboard. Then you can open the 
terminal and type 'lspci '.Then
you might get something like this:

 00:00.0 Host bridge: Intel Corporation 440BX/ZX/DX - 82443BX/ZX/DX Host bridge 
(rev 03)
00:01.0 PCI bridge: Intel Corporation 440BX/ZX/DX - 82443BX/ZX/DX AGP bridge 
(rev 03)
00:04.0 ISA bridge: Intel Corporation 82371AB/EB/MB PIIX4 ISA (rev 02)
00:04.1 IDE interface: Intel Corporation 82371AB/EB/MB PIIX4 IDE (rev 01)
00:04.2 USB Controller: Intel Corporation 82371AB/EB/MB PIIX4 USB (rev 01)
00:04.3 Bridge: Intel Corporation 82371AB/EB/MB PIIX4 ACPI (rev 02)
00:0d.0 Ethernet controller: 3Com Corporation 3c905B 100BaseTX [Cyclone] (rev 
30)
01:00.0 VGA compatible controller: nVidia Corporation NV10 [GeForce 256 SDR] 
(rev 10)

The PCI is proboly your sound card. Then the terminal listed the company that 
programed your sound card,
you can then go to their website and look up your sound card and download the 
driver. If the driver is only for windows or mac, you might want to try typing 
'sudo gedit /etc/modules' or 'sudo vim /etc/modules' and then add your driver 
name.
NOTE: you might type something like: snd_sbawe

-- 
Audigy sound card produces no sound
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/107540
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