Originally Posted by
pete
I'm a milkdrop fan.
The way I'd do it would be to have the sound output going into the line-in on your PC (you could play the track from your phone connected to the computer for this).
Then set winamp and the milkdrop visualiser (its all free and standard when you download winamp) running to accept the line in as the input, and on fullscreen.
Set your video capture program to record your screen.
Play your track on your phone or whatever.
Save, then edit the video when the track has finished.
Milkdrop is very versatile and programmable with presets and even your own pictures etc.... its really a rabbit-hole of crazy stuff that's all available free online.
Here's how to setup line-in:
If you want to use your sound card's Line-In or CD Audio inputs for
sound data (instead of mp3 files), you can do this. Do the following:
1. CONNECT WIRES
Connect your audio source (a stereo, a live feed, whatever) into
the line-in (or microphone) 1/8" jack on your sound card. You
might want to test & verify that your cable is good before doing
this.
2. SELECT SOUND INPUT CHANNEL & ADJUST VOLUME
In Windows, double-click the speaker icon in your systray (where
the clock is). Then, on the menu, go to Options -> Properties
and select the "Recording" option. Then make sure the Line In
(or Microphone) input channel (whichever is appropriate for
your case) is SELECTED (with a check mark) and that the volume
is close to, or at, the maximum. Hit OK.
3. TELL WINAMP TO USE LINE-IN
Open Winamp, and hit CTRL+L (the "Open Location" hotkey). Now
type in "linein://" as the location you want to open. (Leave out
the quotes and make sure you use FORWARD slashes.) Hit PLAY
('x' key for the lazy), and the little built-in oscilloscope (or
spectrum analyzer) in Winamp should start showing your signal.
4. RUN MILKDROP
Run MilkDrop as usual. If the waves are too small or large,
either adjust the volume from Windows' Volume Control, or adjust
the sound level at the source.
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