Results Report
Well, first, I can report success: I was able to accomplish my main purpose, which was to capture the recital while I was out-of-town, so that I didn't have to miss it altogether.
However, I'm very puzzled by the results I found when I got home, and thought I'd present them for comment.
I had installed VLC 1.1.11 for Windoze on TWO machines, both connected to the same router. One is a Windoze XP 32-bit machine with about 3 GIG of RAM; the other is a 6-core Windoze 7 64-bit machine with a ridiculous about of RAM, so much that VLC doesn't save a file to disk, when I record until the entire broadcast is over. I set them both up with Windoze AT commands to start a few minutes apart shortly before the concert began--the 32-bit XP machine starting about 2 minutes before the 64-bit Windoze 7 machine. Same software; same command--the one you gave me.
When I returned home, late last night, I was pleased to discover files sitting on BOTH machines that looked an appropriate length.
The one recorded on the 32-bit XP machine, however, had sound too distorted to enjoy: it has tiny little "clicks" or perhaps split-second silences when the pianist is playing--these "clicks" seem to follow the sound; I don't hear them BEFORE the music begins, when all that is heard is the ambient noise in the hall with the audience filing in to take their seats--but when the pianist is playing, those clicks interfere with the sound in a manner that makes the recording useless. It's a bit hard to describe, but I could park the resulting file somewhere for examination if you'd like to see it.
I was very upset, hearing this--so close and yet so far!! But that is why I set two different machines recording the concert, figuring that would be "insurance" against a mishap. To my delighted surprise, the recording on the OTHER machine, the Windoze 7 64-bit one with 6 processors and all that power, saved a file as good as the ones I get when I hit "record" and am sitting there. It's nice and clear, and I shall settle down later on with the scores to enjoy the concert.
But I'm very puzzled as to what happened. The VLC on the Windoze 7 machine was actually installed under a Windoze XP 64-bit installation on that same machine, and was running FROM that partition under Windoze 7, so I doubt it was installed all that differently from the same installation program on the two systems--and as far as I know, Windoze XP 64 tucked it in among the 32-bit programs anyway.
I suppose the other difference would be the hard disks themselves--I'm sure the disks on the 64-bit machine are newer, faster, etc.
But the results are SO different, as far as sound goes, that I don't quite know what to make of it. One is a superlative recording, and the other is a mess which I shall discard once I'm sure nobody wants to have a look at it to see what went wrong.
I'm quite sure that, modulo path names to the files, and slightly different run-time lengths, I gave identical parameters on the commands on both machines.
I'm fairly certain I've made "clean" recordings on the Windoze 32-bit XP machine when I use the "record button" on the VLC GUI interface, too.
Both machines had only a CMD console window open, and only the usual background programs running, and I try to keep those to a minimum anyway; and BOTH machines have six processors, and pretty hefty motherboards.
And if, as you say, it's just putting the raw stream away in a file without monkeying with it, then I can't imagine why the two files should have come out so different.
Let me know if you'd like me to put the two resulting files up for you to have a look at (they're each between 160 megabytes and change), or if you just need to hear a little bit of the "choppy" effect I mean, I can cut out some excerpts for you. The "Media Information" Codec details look the same in the two recordings.
Thank you, thank you, thank you again!
I was heartbroken to be missing this recital, and am so glad that now, thanks to you, I will be able to hear it after all! (Maybe I should let you have a copy as a thank you? Let me know if you'd like to hear it too.)