Now close this dialog and hit Ctrl-Shift-K to start the viz (Or find "Start" in the Viz menu) and then hit Alt-Enter to kick it full screen.In this post we will be going over the current application of 3D simulations in light designing environments. Change the Display Mode drop down to the resolution closest to the native res of the secondary monitor unless your computer is too weak to drive that many pixels (you'll know because the viz will be choppy). In the FULLSCREEN section, Display Adapter is most likely set to "1. and you should see the MilkDrop settings since you've already selected MilkDrop for your viz. Now we need to make WinAmp/MilkDrop go fullscreen to the secondary display instead of the primary one as it will do by default.īack to WinAmp menu, Visualization -> Configure Plugin. Go to Windows Screen Resolution and make sure Multiple Displays is set to "Extend These Displays" instead of "Duplicate These Displays" and take note of the resolution of the secondary display. When we run MilkDrop we want it to run full screen on the projector, but leave spotify up on the main screen. If you are hearing the feedback again, just turn the volume in WinAmp down to zero so it isn't playing out the speakers (I didn't have to do this tho).īack to the menu and choose Visualization -> Select Plugin. Now you should see the EQ bars in WinAmp bouncing around just like the bar in Sound Recorder as it is sampling the input. In the URL box type "linein://" without the quotes and hit OK. Right-click anywhere and choose Play -> Url.
That's what my dad always says about his Mac anyway. If you're on a Mac good luck but I assume since it's a Mac it just works.
MilkDrop needs to be able to detect the beat to the give sweet visuals.įinally if your recording device has different drivers, you may have totally different options in this properties dialog, but hopefully not too different. Go to the Levels tab, and adjust the recording level so that Sound Recorder doesn't peak out, but the bar is routinely getting almost completely full. Yeah we want to listen to it, but we don't want to echo it out to the speakers which is what this setting does. Select the recording input and choose Properties and go the "Listen" tab and UNcheck "Listen to this device". If you can't find your recording device you may need to "Show Disabled Devices". If it's not working because your recording device is disabled, enable it. Keep Sound Recorder running on the screen as well. On Windows right-click the volume icon on your start bar and choose "Recording Devices" and make sure that the input you're using has got some green bars indicating that there's sound coming in. If not, or if you've got the feedback, you now need to tweak your sound recording settings.
How to know? Run "Sound Recorder" (or the Mac equivalent) and check that the sound guage is bouncing up and down indicating that audio is coming in the line in. If you don't hear the feedback, it may still be working (just not echoing the input back to the output, which is exactly what we want). That's because everything that comes in is being played out the stereo and then coming back to us again. You may immediately hear some insane staticy feedback and echoing. Play some Spotify, make sure you can hear it on the stereo - not too loud tho because.
Unplug the line in from the computer for a sec. On my stereo it automatically directs the current input to the tape out, hopefully yours is the same - if not you need to turn on recording on your stereo and possibly direct the correct input to it. Get a RCA-to-headphone-jack cable and run from there to the mic or line-in jack on your computer (line-in is preferable if you have both).
It's typically labled TAPE OUT or something on mine it's labled CD-R/TAPE. Most stereos have an output designed to send the audio output to a tape deck for recording. Some of this may not match your setup, but hopefully some of it will be useful anyway. I'm going to assume you want to use WinAmp with the default MilkDrop visualization plugin that it comes with.
I'll assume you have a secondary monitor, TV or projector plugged into the computer. So I'm not going to go in to the messing around with "loopback audio drivers" and whatnot, instead I'm going to assume you have your Spotify computer running into a stereo (if not, you can google "loopback audio driver" but you're on your own with that).
This used to be very easy to do in software, but these days it's become very difficult for dumb piracy prevention reasons and most drivers won't loop back. The key is looping the output of Spotify back to the input of your program that's doing the visualizations. This is not a question, I just wanted to share how I got this working so that I can use Spotify to play music on my laptop, while the secondary monitor plays visuals based on the Spotify output.
HOWTO: Spotify "party-mode" with trippy visuals fr.