I suggest that you use a virtual cable for that.
Either Virtual Audio Cable (VAC) orVirtual Audio Meter (e.g. the
banana edition) or Jacks for Windows.
I suggest that you direct your screen reader output first to your
audio card (instead of the default audio device) before installing any
of these programs since you wouldn't hear the screen reader afterwards
because new drivers are installed as default output.
You would first have to set the audio output of the stand alone piano
application to "Virtual line one".
In Audacity, you set the input to the same cable (Shift+I).
In order to hear yourself, you can enable "Playthrough" and also
"Overdub" (for the already recorded tracks or background tracks) in
the Transport menu.
However, I personally prefer to enable "Listen to" in the Windows
control panel instead of "Playthrough", so that only the virtual cable
is monitored and not every input in Audacity. This is to say, you
could switch to microphone without having nasty feedback.
To do that, open the run dialog (Windows+r), enter
mmsys.cpl
While you're on the playback tab, select your normal sound card and
make it the default again (see reason above).
Switch to the recording tab, select the virtual cable and press properties.
Check the checkbox for "listen to that device" on the second tab and
choose your speaker/sound card as output.
Cheers
Robert
On 04/02/2021, luís manuel de jesus lopes <jesuslopes67@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Greetings!
Does anyone know about this matter?!...:
- I want to record a virtual digital piano (such as the *Kawai VPC1*) into
*Audacity*.
- Using a *standalone piano library software*.
- Can I record it into *Audacity*?
Record it, and monitoring the tracks already recorded?...
I do appreciate any help on this matter!
Thank you!
Luís Manuel