I have managed to achieve this through a pure WebAudio solution (no Recorderjs needed). You can see it working fully on my discJS project and use the relevant source file to see how my complete code is working. I imagine this is only relevant to recording WebAudio nodes that you are playing yourself programmatically.
First you will need an HTML <audio>
to use as a final destination. In this case I choose to show the controls so that the user may easily download the resulting file.
<audio id='recording' controls='true'></audio>
Now for the Javascript mojo:
const CONTEXT = new AudioContext();
var recorder=false;
var recordingstream=false;
function startrecording(){
recordingstream=CONTEXT.createMediaStreamDestination();
recorder=new MediaRecorder(recordingstream.stream);
recorder.start();
}
function stoprecording(){
recorder.addEventListener('dataavailable',function(e){
document.querySelector('#recording').src=URL.createObjectURL(e.data);
recorder=false;
recordingstream=false;
});
recorder.stop();
}
Now the final glue is that whenever you play an audio source, you also need to connect it to your recording stream:
function play(source){
let a=new Audio(source);
let mediasource=CONTEXT.createMediaElementSource(a);
mediasource.connect(CONTEXT.destination);//plays to default context (speakers)
mediasource.connect(recordingstream);//connects also to MediaRecorder
a.play();
}
This is a relatively primitive setup that works fine (tested on Firefox 52 and Chrome 70). For a more proper implementation, see MediaRecorder on MDN.