Fender Universal Asio Driver Windows 8
Posted by admin- in Home -02/12/17ASIO4ALL - Universal ASIO Driver For WDM Audio ASIO4ALL - Universal ASIO Driver For WDM Audio A4A News 23 May 2017: Version 2.14 released! • Combined 32/64 bit version, supports Win 98SE/ME/2k/XP/MCE/2003/XP64 and Vista/Windows 7/Windows 8.x/Windows 10 x86/x64 There is just one single change in this version.
Get the Fender Universal ASIO Audio Driver 2.10.F for Windows 7 driver. An official OTHER SOUNDCARDS software for the Sound Card device. Update the Fender Universal. Free Download Fender Universal ASIO Audio Driver 2.10.F for Windows 7 (Sound Card). Get the Fender Universal ASIO Audio Driver 2.10.F for XP/Vista driver. An official OTHER SOUNDCARDS software for the Sound Card device. Update the Fender Universal.
If your system is not affected, there is no reason to upgrade. Localized versions will not be provided, for the very same reason. Changes since version 2.13 • Workaround for a bug in Windows 10 Creators Update: USB audio capture would not work any more (red exclamation mark, distorted sound.) 05 November 2015: Version 2.13 released! • Combined 32/64 bit version, supports Win 98SE/ME/2k/XP/MCE/2003/XP64 and Vista/Windows 7/Windows 8.x/Windows 10 x86/x64 Minor update. Now Windows 10 is officially supported, even though it has been working all along. Changes since version 2.12 • Workaround for a bug in the Windows 8/8.1 Bluetooth audio driver (causing BSOD when device is opened twice).
This bug seems to have been fixed in Windows 10. • Improvement: UI response time and driver (re-) start time should be a lot snappier now. • Fix: Some Application Verifier errors should be gone. ASIO is a trademark of. Everything else on this page, including the numbers 16, 48 and 100 is or may become a trademark of, except for trademarks of their respective owners that are used for product identification purposes only. Aspect And Impact Register Iso 14001. The rest, as well as the stuff mentioned above that has not yet become a trademark of is Copyright(c)2003-2015,.
Just downloaded and tried it. Got it to work - in a fashion. I'm guessing you're using Windows 7, 8 or whatever. If you're on a Mac I can't help. Ok, firstly, have you installed the ASIO driver for the Mustang?
If not, you should: I found I had to turn on and connect the Mustang to the PC before opening up Ableton Live otherwise it didn't show up in the following menus. In AL, click preferences and then the 'Audio' tab. Set the Driver Type to 'ASIO' and the Audio Device to 'Fender Universal ASIO' as below: Then click on the 'Hardware Setup' button and make sure your amp is selected and active: Now, for me, I couldn't record if my soundcard was turned on (VIA High Definition Audio in the pic). As you can see, it's not lit up. I had to turn it off or nothing recorded.
Also, hover your cursor over the 'Mustang Amplifier' option in the list and wait for the popup box to come up. It will tell you if it's active or idle. For some reason, the first time I went through everything, it was saying my amp was idle, even though it wasn't. I had to restart Ableton live again and it magically said 'active'. Dunno why, but check. If everything's ok, close the dialogue boxes and in the main Ableton live window click on 'Recording Audio' on the right hand side and follow the little tutorial to check if you can record.
If you can, you'll see the audio level monitor thing move as you play your guitar. Nothing will come through the speakers as you've turned off your soundcard (don't worry, it's only turned off in Ableton Live. If you quite the programme your speakers will still work!). Now, for me, I have to bloody turn my soundcard back on via hardware setup to play what I just recorded. It's a lot of messing around, and maybe there's some way around it but at the moment I can't record if my soundcard is turned on in Ableton Live which means turning it on and off as and when needed. Still, I can record using the same amp and software as you so give it a try and see how you go. You see that button that says OFF(Yellow) click the AUTO button next to it.
I can see signal on your meter. Also up in the right ahnd corner. You see the RED X.
Look right down below it and you see two circles. One is yellow and has horizontal lines. The other is gray and has vertical lines.
Click the gray one. Now you can see your track more easily and tell how much signal you have. Instead of AUTO click ON. Then strum your guitar.
You should hear the Fuse program and what ever amp you have dialed in. Those buttons are for MONITOR --- MONITOR means 'What I hear' you have it set to OFF so you shouldn't hear it. Do you have any other audio apps open? It sounds like something else has grabbed the audio driver.
But that aside. When you switched to other view do you see your guitar signal.
It really difficult to guess what you are doing. Can you describe what you actually hear and see? First off let's make a list here.
Can you hear your Amp in the room with you? IOW, when you just play your guitar do you hear it? Next when you start Fuse, can you see the meters move at top.
There should be an INPUT meter and an OUTPUT meter. Are they both moving? Next start Live. In the Vertical Track view, with Ext IN selected and the track Armed.
Can you see the meters move? @Casual: As TB-AV says. It could be that something is using the Audio Out, making the driver unavailable. Ableton Live should be priority while it's running, but you never know. Just make sure you've nothing running in the background that plays sound. Music, or a video player for example. It could also be you've not turned your sound back on.
I advised to turn in off in my previous post so you could record, but you have to turn in back on again to listen to what you played (or listen to anything through Ableton Live). In Ableton Live, go to Options>Preferences>Audio and click the 'test tone' button.
If you can hear the tone, you should be able to hear everything else through Ableton Live. If not, read on. I only played with it for about 10 mins last night but after another few mins looking at it today I can now hear what I play through my PC speakers and turn the Master Volume on the amp, off. I just had to deselect all other Line-in/out ports apart from the main Audio Out.
See below to show you what I mean: As you can see above, my Mustang Amp is on (needed for recording), and my PC soundcard is turned on (needed for playback), but I've turned off everything apart from the main speaker out. Connect your amp to your PC, plug in your guitar and turn the amp on. Now open Ableton Live and go to Options>Preferences>Audio>Hardware Setup to open up the same box as above. Your amp should show up, and be turned on, and your soundcard too. If it's off, turn it on, open up the tree using the little '+' sign if it isn't open already and deselect everything apart from the main Audio Out.
The names of everything might be different to mine depending on the soundcard you have but you can play around turning things on and off and use the 'Test Tone' to check. For me, though, I can only have the main Audio In on otherwise I can't record. You might not even be able to have anything on, which just means you'll have to keep turning the soundcard on and off depending on whether you're recording or playing back what you've recorded. Secondly, check whether you have selected inputs for in and out. Again, go back to the Preferences>Audio menu and click the 'Input Config' button.
Select the 1st two like so: I only have the two mono and one stereo option for input as all other inputs are turned off on my soundcard. I know these inputs are the Mustang. You should have the same. Now for the outputs, click the 'Output Config' button: More options here. Dunno why as the only outputs I have turned on in the AISO driver menu is my Audio Out.
I just chose the 1st four but the 1st two work for me anyway. You can use the Mustang amp as an output so Ableton live could send a signal to the amp for playback, but as yet that's not working for me. Not a problem unless you really want to playback something through the amp.
It won't affect recording. After all that, you can go try and record something again. Use the little tutorial on how to record on the right-hand side in Ableton rather than create your own live set.
Everything should be default incase you've altered something while trying to get things to work. If you still cannot get things going, post some screen shots of the Preferences>Audio window, your Hardware Setup window and your Input/Output Config windows. There is a very good chance you will continue to have problems until you walk through the whole process and make notes along the way. If I were you, I would get a camera and when you get Fuse running play a chord and take a good clear picture of the screen. Then move over to Live and take photos of the screens for options, track view, Audio interface, etc. Also when you do that.
Rather than just show. ASIO FENDER FUSE Click on the little drop arrow and photo the other options available. But you are simply not answering questions that need answers and we can't see anything. So you say you are doing it, but we have no idea where you are missing something. I think if you do that we can get it running.
It's usually something very simple. You see on your last picture above. The little green 'flag rectangle'. That is an audio clip. The waveform is directly below it.
In black, now look over to the right and you can see the little meter icon and see green bars. They are right above teh ON button for Track 2. In fact all that is on Track 2.
Now that right there tells you that you recorded a Track in Live so it is working. You have the following things wrong. The Track is still armed for record - press the red button to dis-arm B. Monitor is set to OFF meaning it will not send signal to outputs - set this to AUTO D. You play cursor is not over the wave that I can see --- although it must be over a wave somewhere or there would be no green showing on meters.
Look directly above the green flag and wave and you see an orange triangle. It's possible that is set to basically loop nothing. Pull the right edge of that to the right and see if it highlights the waveform. That's the cursor. At top of your screen. The yellow square with two dots. Put mouse over that and read box in lower left of screen.
What does it say that is? I have Live 7 and don't have that icon. Basically right now. You have this in that final picture. OK, Live we have a clip recorded, everything looks good now don't let me hear it ( still in record ARMred and Monitor OFFyellow ).
When you should change those to let me hear it mode. ARMgray Monitor_auto. It's working like it's supposed to but you are operating it incorrectly.
Which is pretty normal for your first go. But whatever you had the Amp, USB, FUSE, Ableton Live,,, all that 'was' setup properly.
You need to get back to that point. Then we just need you to configure the screen so the sound comes out. You were 90% there.
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- Fender Universal Asio Driver Windows 8 Fender Universal Asio Driver Windows 8 Rating: 4,3/5 166votes
ASIO4ALL - Universal ASIO Driver For WDM Audio ASIO4ALL - Universal ASIO Driver For WDM Audio A4A News 23 May 2017: Version 2.14 released! • Combined 32/64 bit version, supports Win 98SE/ME/2k/XP/MCE/2003/XP64 and Vista/Windows 7/Windows 8.x/Windows 10 x86/x64 There is just one single change in this version.
Get the Fender Universal ASIO Audio Driver 2.10.F for Windows 7 driver. An official OTHER SOUNDCARDS software for the Sound Card device. Update the Fender Universal. Free Download Fender Universal ASIO Audio Driver 2.10.F for Windows 7 (Sound Card). Get the Fender Universal ASIO Audio Driver 2.10.F for XP/Vista driver. An official OTHER SOUNDCARDS software for the Sound Card device. Update the Fender Universal.
If your system is not affected, there is no reason to upgrade. Localized versions will not be provided, for the very same reason. Changes since version 2.13 • Workaround for a bug in Windows 10 Creators Update: USB audio capture would not work any more (red exclamation mark, distorted sound.) 05 November 2015: Version 2.13 released! • Combined 32/64 bit version, supports Win 98SE/ME/2k/XP/MCE/2003/XP64 and Vista/Windows 7/Windows 8.x/Windows 10 x86/x64 Minor update. Now Windows 10 is officially supported, even though it has been working all along. Changes since version 2.12 • Workaround for a bug in the Windows 8/8.1 Bluetooth audio driver (causing BSOD when device is opened twice).
This bug seems to have been fixed in Windows 10. • Improvement: UI response time and driver (re-) start time should be a lot snappier now. • Fix: Some Application Verifier errors should be gone. ASIO is a trademark of. Everything else on this page, including the numbers 16, 48 and 100 is or may become a trademark of, except for trademarks of their respective owners that are used for product identification purposes only. The rest, as well as the stuff mentioned above that has not yet become a trademark of is Copyright(c)2003-2015,.
Just downloaded and tried it. Got it to work - in a fashion. I'm guessing you're using Windows 7, 8 or whatever. If you're on a Mac I can't help. Ok, firstly, have you installed the ASIO driver for the Mustang?
If not, you should: I found I had to turn on and connect the Mustang to the PC before opening up Ableton Live otherwise it didn't show up in the following menus. In AL, click preferences and then the 'Audio' tab. Set the Driver Type to 'ASIO' and the Audio Device to 'Fender Universal ASIO' as below: Then click on the 'Hardware Setup' button and make sure your amp is selected and active: Now, for me, I couldn't record if my soundcard was turned on (VIA High Definition Audio in the pic). As you can see, it's not lit up. I had to turn it off or nothing recorded.
Also, hover your cursor over the 'Mustang Amplifier' option in the list and wait for the popup box to come up. It will tell you if it's active or idle. For some reason, the first time I went through everything, it was saying my amp was idle, even though it wasn't. I had to restart Ableton live again and it magically said 'active'. Dunno why, but check. If everything's ok, close the dialogue boxes and in the main Ableton live window click on 'Recording Audio' on the right hand side and follow the little tutorial to check if you can record.
If you can, you'll see the audio level monitor thing move as you play your guitar. Nothing will come through the speakers as you've turned off your soundcard (don't worry, it's only turned off in Ableton Live. If you quite the programme your speakers will still work!). Now, for me, I have to bloody turn my soundcard back on via hardware setup to play what I just recorded. It's a lot of messing around, and maybe there's some way around it but at the moment I can't record if my soundcard is turned on in Ableton Live which means turning it on and off as and when needed. Still, I can record using the same amp and software as you so give it a try and see how you go. You see that button that says OFF(Yellow) click the AUTO button next to it.
I can see signal on your meter. Also up in the right ahnd corner. You see the RED X.
Look right down below it and you see two circles. One is yellow and has horizontal lines. The other is gray and has vertical lines.
Click the gray one. Now you can see your track more easily and tell how much signal you have. Instead of AUTO click ON. Then strum your guitar.
You should hear the Fuse program and what ever amp you have dialed in. Those buttons are for MONITOR --- MONITOR means 'What I hear' you have it set to OFF so you shouldn't hear it. Do you have any other audio apps open? It sounds like something else has grabbed the audio driver.
But that aside. When you switched to other view do you see your guitar signal.
It really difficult to guess what you are doing. Can you describe what you actually hear and see? First off let's make a list here.
Can you hear your Amp in the room with you? IOW, when you just play your guitar do you hear it? Next when you start Fuse, can you see the meters move at top.
There should be an INPUT meter and an OUTPUT meter. Are they both moving? Next start Live. In the Vertical Track view, with Ext IN selected and the track Armed.
Can you see the meters move? @Casual: As TB-AV says. It could be that something is using the Audio Out, making the driver unavailable. Ableton Live should be priority while it's running, but you never know. Just make sure you've nothing running in the background that plays sound. Music, or a video player for example. It could also be you've not turned your sound back on.
I advised to turn in off in my previous post so you could record, but you have to turn in back on again to listen to what you played (or listen to anything through Ableton Live). Andermant Hack more. In Ableton Live, go to Options>Preferences>Audio and click the 'test tone' button.
If you can hear the tone, you should be able to hear everything else through Ableton Live. If not, read on. I only played with it for about 10 mins last night but after another few mins looking at it today I can now hear what I play through my PC speakers and turn the Master Volume on the amp, off. I just had to deselect all other Line-in/out ports apart from the main Audio Out.
See below to show you what I mean: As you can see above, my Mustang Amp is on (needed for recording), and my PC soundcard is turned on (needed for playback), but I've turned off everything apart from the main speaker out. Connect your amp to your PC, plug in your guitar and turn the amp on. Now open Ableton Live and go to Options>Preferences>Audio>Hardware Setup to open up the same box as above. Your amp should show up, and be turned on, and your soundcard too. If it's off, turn it on, open up the tree using the little '+' sign if it isn't open already and deselect everything apart from the main Audio Out.
The names of everything might be different to mine depending on the soundcard you have but you can play around turning things on and off and use the 'Test Tone' to check. For me, though, I can only have the main Audio In on otherwise I can't record. You might not even be able to have anything on, which just means you'll have to keep turning the soundcard on and off depending on whether you're recording or playing back what you've recorded. Secondly, check whether you have selected inputs for in and out. Again, go back to the Preferences>Audio menu and click the 'Input Config' button.
Select the 1st two like so: I only have the two mono and one stereo option for input as all other inputs are turned off on my soundcard. I know these inputs are the Mustang. You should have the same. Now for the outputs, click the 'Output Config' button: More options here. Dunno why as the only outputs I have turned on in the AISO driver menu is my Audio Out.
I just chose the 1st four but the 1st two work for me anyway. You can use the Mustang amp as an output so Ableton live could send a signal to the amp for playback, but as yet that's not working for me. Not a problem unless you really want to playback something through the amp.
It won't affect recording. After all that, you can go try and record something again. Use the little tutorial on how to record on the right-hand side in Ableton rather than create your own live set.
Everything should be default incase you've altered something while trying to get things to work. If you still cannot get things going, post some screen shots of the Preferences>Audio window, your Hardware Setup window and your Input/Output Config windows. There is a very good chance you will continue to have problems until you walk through the whole process and make notes along the way. If I were you, I would get a camera and when you get Fuse running play a chord and take a good clear picture of the screen. Then move over to Live and take photos of the screens for options, track view, Audio interface, etc. Also when you do that.
Rather than just show. ASIO FENDER FUSE Click on the little drop arrow and photo the other options available. But you are simply not answering questions that need answers and we can't see anything. So you say you are doing it, but we have no idea where you are missing something. I think if you do that we can get it running.
It's usually something very simple. You see on your last picture above. The little green 'flag rectangle'. That is an audio clip. The waveform is directly below it.
In black, now look over to the right and you can see the little meter icon and see green bars. They are right above teh ON button for Track 2. In fact all that is on Track 2.
Now that right there tells you that you recorded a Track in Live so it is working. You have the following things wrong. The Track is still armed for record - press the red button to dis-arm B. Monitor is set to OFF meaning it will not send signal to outputs - set this to AUTO D. You play cursor is not over the wave that I can see --- although it must be over a wave somewhere or there would be no green showing on meters.
Look directly above the green flag and wave and you see an orange triangle. It's possible that is set to basically loop nothing. Pull the right edge of that to the right and see if it highlights the waveform. That's the cursor. At top of your screen. The yellow square with two dots. Put mouse over that and read box in lower left of screen.
What does it say that is? I have Live 7 and don't have that icon. Basically right now. You have this in that final picture. OK, Live we have a clip recorded, everything looks good now don't let me hear it ( still in record ARMred and Monitor OFFyellow ).
When you should change those to let me hear it mode. ARMgray Monitor_auto. It's working like it's supposed to but you are operating it incorrectly.
Which is pretty normal for your first go. But whatever you had the Amp, USB, FUSE, Ableton Live,,, all that 'was' setup properly.
You need to get back to that point. Then we just need you to configure the screen so the sound comes out. You were 90% there.
- Fender Universal Asio Driver Windows 8 Fender Universal Asio Driver Windows 8 Rating: 4,3/5 166votes
ASIO4ALL - Universal ASIO Driver For WDM Audio ASIO4ALL - Universal ASIO Driver For WDM Audio A4A News 23 May 2017: Version 2.14 released! • Combined 32/64 bit version, supports Win 98SE/ME/2k/XP/MCE/2003/XP64 and Vista/Windows 7/Windows 8.x/Windows 10 x86/x64 There is just one single change in this version.
Get the Fender Universal ASIO Audio Driver 2.10.F for Windows 7 driver. An official OTHER SOUNDCARDS software for the Sound Card device. Update the Fender Universal. Free Download Fender Universal ASIO Audio Driver 2.10.F for Windows 7 (Sound Card). Get the Fender Universal ASIO Audio Driver 2.10.F for XP/Vista driver. An official OTHER SOUNDCARDS software for the Sound Card device. Update the Fender Universal.
If your system is not affected, there is no reason to upgrade. Localized versions will not be provided, for the very same reason. Changes since version 2.13 • Workaround for a bug in Windows 10 Creators Update: USB audio capture would not work any more (red exclamation mark, distorted sound.) 05 November 2015: Version 2.13 released! • Combined 32/64 bit version, supports Win 98SE/ME/2k/XP/MCE/2003/XP64 and Vista/Windows 7/Windows 8.x/Windows 10 x86/x64 Minor update. Now Windows 10 is officially supported, even though it has been working all along. Changes since version 2.12 • Workaround for a bug in the Windows 8/8.1 Bluetooth audio driver (causing BSOD when device is opened twice).
This bug seems to have been fixed in Windows 10. • Improvement: UI response time and driver (re-) start time should be a lot snappier now. • Fix: Some Application Verifier errors should be gone. ASIO is a trademark of. Everything else on this page, including the numbers 16, 48 and 100 is or may become a trademark of, except for trademarks of their respective owners that are used for product identification purposes only. The rest, as well as the stuff mentioned above that has not yet become a trademark of is Copyright(c)2003-2015,.
Just downloaded and tried it. Got it to work - in a fashion. I'm guessing you're using Windows 7, 8 or whatever. If you're on a Mac I can't help. Ok, firstly, have you installed the ASIO driver for the Mustang?
If not, you should: I found I had to turn on and connect the Mustang to the PC before opening up Ableton Live otherwise it didn't show up in the following menus. In AL, click preferences and then the 'Audio' tab. Set the Driver Type to 'ASIO' and the Audio Device to 'Fender Universal ASIO' as below: Then click on the 'Hardware Setup' button and make sure your amp is selected and active: Now, for me, I couldn't record if my soundcard was turned on (VIA High Definition Audio in the pic). As you can see, it's not lit up. I had to turn it off or nothing recorded.
Also, hover your cursor over the 'Mustang Amplifier' option in the list and wait for the popup box to come up. It will tell you if it's active or idle. For some reason, the first time I went through everything, it was saying my amp was idle, even though it wasn't. I had to restart Ableton live again and it magically said 'active'. Dunno why, but check. If everything's ok, close the dialogue boxes and in the main Ableton live window click on 'Recording Audio' on the right hand side and follow the little tutorial to check if you can record.
If you can, you'll see the audio level monitor thing move as you play your guitar. Nothing will come through the speakers as you've turned off your soundcard (don't worry, it's only turned off in Ableton Live. If you quite the programme your speakers will still work!). Now, for me, I have to bloody turn my soundcard back on via hardware setup to play what I just recorded. It's a lot of messing around, and maybe there's some way around it but at the moment I can't record if my soundcard is turned on in Ableton Live which means turning it on and off as and when needed. Still, I can record using the same amp and software as you so give it a try and see how you go. You see that button that says OFF(Yellow) click the AUTO button next to it.
I can see signal on your meter. Also up in the right ahnd corner. You see the RED X.
Look right down below it and you see two circles. One is yellow and has horizontal lines. The other is gray and has vertical lines.
Click the gray one. Now you can see your track more easily and tell how much signal you have. Instead of AUTO click ON. Then strum your guitar.
You should hear the Fuse program and what ever amp you have dialed in. Those buttons are for MONITOR --- MONITOR means 'What I hear' you have it set to OFF so you shouldn't hear it. Do you have any other audio apps open? It sounds like something else has grabbed the audio driver.
But that aside. When you switched to other view do you see your guitar signal.
It really difficult to guess what you are doing. Can you describe what you actually hear and see? First off let's make a list here.
Can you hear your Amp in the room with you? IOW, when you just play your guitar do you hear it? Next when you start Fuse, can you see the meters move at top.
There should be an INPUT meter and an OUTPUT meter. Are they both moving? Next start Live. In the Vertical Track view, with Ext IN selected and the track Armed.
Can you see the meters move? @Casual: As TB-AV says. It could be that something is using the Audio Out, making the driver unavailable. Ableton Live should be priority while it's running, but you never know. Just make sure you've nothing running in the background that plays sound. Music, or a video player for example. It could also be you've not turned your sound back on.
I advised to turn in off in my previous post so you could record, but you have to turn in back on again to listen to what you played (or listen to anything through Ableton Live). In Ableton Live, go to Options>Preferences>Audio and click the 'test tone' button.
If you can hear the tone, you should be able to hear everything else through Ableton Live. If not, read on. I only played with it for about 10 mins last night but after another few mins looking at it today I can now hear what I play through my PC speakers and turn the Master Volume on the amp, off. I just had to deselect all other Line-in/out ports apart from the main Audio Out.
See below to show you what I mean: As you can see above, my Mustang Amp is on (needed for recording), and my PC soundcard is turned on (needed for playback), but I've turned off everything apart from the main speaker out. Connect your amp to your PC, plug in your guitar and turn the amp on. Now open Ableton Live and go to Options>Preferences>Audio>Hardware Setup to open up the same box as above. Your amp should show up, and be turned on, and your soundcard too. If it's off, turn it on, open up the tree using the little '+' sign if it isn't open already and deselect everything apart from the main Audio Out.
The names of everything might be different to mine depending on the soundcard you have but you can play around turning things on and off and use the 'Test Tone' to check. For me, though, I can only have the main Audio In on otherwise I can't record. You might not even be able to have anything on, which just means you'll have to keep turning the soundcard on and off depending on whether you're recording or playing back what you've recorded. Secondly, check whether you have selected inputs for in and out. Again, go back to the Preferences>Audio menu and click the 'Input Config' button.
Select the 1st two like so: I only have the two mono and one stereo option for input as all other inputs are turned off on my soundcard. I know these inputs are the Mustang. You should have the same. Now for the outputs, click the 'Output Config' button: More options here. Dunno why as the only outputs I have turned on in the AISO driver menu is my Audio Out.
I just chose the 1st four but the 1st two work for me anyway. You can use the Mustang amp as an output so Ableton live could send a signal to the amp for playback, but as yet that's not working for me. Not a problem unless you really want to playback something through the amp.
It won't affect recording. After all that, you can go try and record something again. Use the little tutorial on how to record on the right-hand side in Ableton rather than create your own live set.
Everything should be default incase you've altered something while trying to get things to work. If you still cannot get things going, post some screen shots of the Preferences>Audio window, your Hardware Setup window and your Input/Output Config windows. There is a very good chance you will continue to have problems until you walk through the whole process and make notes along the way. If I were you, I would get a camera and when you get Fuse running play a chord and take a good clear picture of the screen. Then move over to Live and take photos of the screens for options, track view, Audio interface, etc. Also when you do that.
Rather than just show. ASIO FENDER FUSE Click on the little drop arrow and photo the other options available. But you are simply not answering questions that need answers and we can't see anything. So you say you are doing it, but we have no idea where you are missing something. I think if you do that we can get it running.
It's usually something very simple. You see on your last picture above. The little green 'flag rectangle'. That is an audio clip. The waveform is directly below it.
In black, now look over to the right and you can see the little meter icon and see green bars. They are right above teh ON button for Track 2. In fact all that is on Track 2.
Now that right there tells you that you recorded a Track in Live so it is working. You have the following things wrong. The Track is still armed for record - press the red button to dis-arm B. Monitor is set to OFF meaning it will not send signal to outputs - set this to AUTO D. You play cursor is not over the wave that I can see --- although it must be over a wave somewhere or there would be no green showing on meters.
Look directly above the green flag and wave and you see an orange triangle. It's possible that is set to basically loop nothing. Pull the right edge of that to the right and see if it highlights the waveform. That's the cursor. At top of your screen. The yellow square with two dots. Put mouse over that and read box in lower left of screen.
What does it say that is? I have Live 7 and don't have that icon. Basically right now. You have this in that final picture. OK, Live we have a clip recorded, everything looks good now don't let me hear it ( still in record ARMred and Monitor OFFyellow ).
When you should change those to let me hear it mode. ARMgray Monitor_auto. It's working like it's supposed to but you are operating it incorrectly.
Which is pretty normal for your first go. But whatever you had the Amp, USB, FUSE, Ableton Live,,, all that 'was' setup properly.
You need to get back to that point. Then we just need you to configure the screen so the sound comes out. You were 90% there.