Wav out will do the trick.

When you have Wav out Mix selected in the recording controls, you use the volume and balance sliders and mute check boxes in the playback controls just like a mixer. In other words, you determine how loud each thing coming through the speakers and the Wav Mix will be. Wav Out Mix duplicates what you are hearing through your speakers.

Because you will use the volume sliders in the playback controls to set up your mix, you should set the Wav Out Mix volume slider in the recording controls dialogue to 100 percent, and the master volume slider in playback to 100 percent also. This way, when you move the sliders around in playback, you will hear a true representation of what is going on.

Note: Make sure that microphone is muted before you do any of this if you have one connected, cuz you'll blast your ears off! LOL!

By the way, There's a free utility that you may like to try. It's called Quick Mix, and basically you set up both your recording and playback controls exactly how you want them in order to do a particular thing like record the Windows Media Stream, and then Quick Mix will take a snapshot of these settings and allow you to save them to a file which you can use again in future. There is no limit to how many different configurations you can store, AND YOU CAN EVEN LOAD ONE IN TO YOUR START-UP GROUP SO THAT YOUR COMPUTER WILL ALWAYS RETURN TO A DEFAULT YOU HAVE CREATED EACH TIME YOU BOOT UP.

You can get Quick Mix from:
www.jfwlite.com
Just look under Programs.

Hope all that helps:

Regards,

Matt


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