
A 64-bit wav recorder plugin that I found worked on my 64-bit DAW is the MRecorder by Melda Production. I found the plugin to have complications when running it in Cubase 64-bit. And by the way, Voxengo Recorder is a 32-bit plugin that will only work on 32-bit DAW. This method of recording my DAW however felt a little tedious to me. You’re done! A great-sounding screencasting with two audio channels. Upon finishing recording your screencast, you then use a video editor to combine the wav file which is outputted from Voxengo Recorder. Just make sure that you are recording your microphone signal on your screencasting software.

The plugin will output a wav file to a chosen folder on your computer. Leave the plugin recording and anything you play on your DAW while you screencast will be recorded by the plugin. What the plugin does is it will record anything that goes through your DAW output. This method requires you to download a plugin called Voxengo Recorder. The First Method – Recording Your DAW’s Output Actually, there are few ways you can screencast your DAW on Windows, so let me explain. This method of screencasting your DAW on Windows is also free. At this point, I almost regretted switching from the Mac to PC.īeing a stubborn person I searched high and low for a solution to this problem and I finally found a method that works best for me. It’s not going to give you a low latency performance on your DAW. Screencasting software like Camtasia, Microsoft Expression, or BBFlashback only records your system audio, which happens to be the crappy windows audio driver. There is NO screencasting software on Windows that can record ASIO right from your DAW. I finally found a way to record screencast my DAW on Windows with ASIO.

However, recording a DAW screencast on Windows DAW is a nightmare. Making a screencast of your DAW on a Mac is pretty easy.
