System audio sampler for macOS
Always holding the last few minutes of your Mac's audio. Rewind, select, drag it into your DAW.
macOS 14.2+
A rolling buffer keeps the last 30 seconds to 10 minutes of system audio at all times. The take you almost lost is still sitting there, waiting for you to reach back and grab it.
A browser tab, a video call, a stream, a soft-synth — if your Mac can play it, you can sample it. No routing, no virtual cables, no setup. Pull from your computer whenever you want.
Select a slice of the waveform and drag it into your DAW or the Finder, copy and paste it, or save it anywhere on your Mac.
Built on a native Core Audio tap. Tucked behind your DAW it idles at effectively zero — the render timer literally stops while the window is hidden.
Audio lives only in a rolling memory window you control — 30 seconds to 10 minutes. Everything older simply vanishes. Nothing is written to disk until you deliberately export it.
Grab a clip from YouTube, pull a riff out of a jam, rescue a line from a podcast, or capture a sound from any app on your Mac.
Matinee, Dusk, Midnight, and Witching Hour — tap one to preview it on this page.
backsample holds nothing but a short, rolling memory of recent sound. Quit the app and it's gone. The only audio that ever survives is the audio you choose to drag out. No files, no cloud, no account — the capture even excludes its own process, so it never records itself.
It continuously captures your Mac's audio output into a rolling buffer that only ever holds the most recent slice of time — anywhere from 30 seconds to 10 minutes, your choice. Older audio is constantly overwritten and discarded. It's less a recorder and more a short-term memory you can reach back into.
While you're listening, everything lives in a rolling memory buffer — nothing is written to disk. When you drag a selection out, save it, or paste after copying, the clip is written to your Clips folder (default: ~/Music/backsample/). Copy with ⌘C doesn't create a file until you actually paste; the WAV appears in the Clips folder at that moment. You can change the folder location in Settings, and reveal it anytime from the menu.
It's deliberately featherweight. Capture runs on an efficient Core Audio tap, and when the window is hidden behind your DAW the waveform stops redrawing entirely — CPU use drops to effectively zero in the background.
Everything your Mac sends to its output — any app, browser tab, call, or game — mixed together as system audio. It intelligently excludes its own sound so it never captures itself. It follows your default output device, including external interfaces and Bluetooth headphones.
A single macOS System Audio Recording permission, granted once on first launch. A friendly onboarding screen walks you through it and deep-links straight to the right System Settings pane if you ever need to change it.
A clean 32-bit, 48 kHz stereo WAV of exactly the region you selected — ready to drop into any DAW or editor. You can drag it straight out, copy it, or save it wherever you like.
As far as you set it. The retained window is adjustable from 30 seconds up to 10 minutes (it defaults to 2). A longer window holds more history in memory; a shorter one keeps the footprint tiny.
Download backsample and let it keep watch. The next time you think "I wish I'd recorded that," you already did.
Universal binary · v1.0