jdogric12 wrote:It's possible it's a sample rate mismatch but I don't really know. I'm hearing it on other strings beside your B. Does this happen with other instruments?
I have not been using the Jam to do very many recordings to date so I really don't know. I'm only hearing it occasionally on the B, but I did notice if I have the volume turned down it gets worse(?). Full volume, it sounds really good to my ears, especially this uncompressed version. Maybe the waveform itself is hard for speakers to handle at low volume? I'm not sure. In GarageBand it sounds crystal clear and that's why I used AIF.
jdogric12 wrote:For several months I thought my old Fender Cyber Twin amp (which I now know outputs 16/44.1 via S/PDIF) was dying when all my recordings had a similar and very noticeable buzz (guitar, not bass, of course). Then I realized I was recording at 24/96, and ProTools didn't like the 16/44.1 it was being fed. Once I realized what was happening, I started setting up a separate session for direct digital guitar tracks to record at 16/44.1, along to bounced tracks of whatever rhythm tracks I'd already completed, and importing the new 16/44.1 audio into my original 24/96 sessions.
The Apogee Jam spec is "44.1/48 kHz, 24-bit analog-to-digital conversion". So bit depth is okay, but I have no idea how to adjust the rate in GB. I can take a screen shot to show you what I mean: GB doesn't display sampling rate info in the recording quality drop box, just depth.