Inside the Recording Studio
  • Tuesday Tips
  • About Us
  • Giveaway
  • Review
  • Contact
  • Shop
  • My account
  • February 13, 2026
    Psychological

    Recording Myths About Sample Rate and EQ



    Do you need a second mortgage for your home studio gear… or just better decisions? In this episode of Inside the Recording Studio, Chris & Jody take aim at some of the most stubborn recording myths floating around forums, YouTube comments, and that one friend who always says, “Yeah, but at 192k it just sounds better.”

    Let’s talk about it.

    Is the highest sample rate always the right move? Is that boutique EQ actually worth your rent money? Are you missing out because you’re not using “pro-level” converters? Or is the internet just really good at selling anxiety?

    Chris & Jody break down these recording setup tips with a mix of practical insight and dry humor. They’re not here to shame your gear choices, or worship them. They’re here to ask what actually matters in a recording setup and what’s just digital overkill.

    There’s some light shade thrown at gear snobbery. There’s perspective from industry names like CJ Vanston, Jeff Scott Soto, Eric Valentine, Dave Pensado, and even Sir George Martin. And there’s the quiet reminder that none of those legends built their reputations on spec sheets alone.

    If you’ve ever gone down a rabbit hole comparing amps, obsessing over EQ curves, or convincing yourself that one more plugin will fix everything, this episode is a gentle (and occasionally sarcastic) nudge back to reality.

    Because here’s the thing: great records don’t come from myths. They come from good decisions, solid fundamentals, and knowing when to stop chasing numbers.

    You’ll also get this week’s Friday Finds, because while we’re busting myths, we’re still discovering cool stuff.

    This conversation is for the home studio crowd trying to level up without lighting their bank account on fire. It’s for independent artists who want honest advice instead of marketing copy. And it’s for anyone who’s ever wondered if the rabbit hole has a bottom.

    Spoiler alert: it does. And it’s usually labeled “practice.”

    If you want practical recording setup tips without the hype, and maybe a little nonsense along the way, press play now.

    Subscribe so you don’t miss next week’s myth demolition.

    ******************************

    Gear we used:
    Jody’s Mic & Voice Chain: Telefunken C12 – Groove Tubes Vipre – Apollo – UA Neve 1073 – UA LA2A – UA Studer A800
    Jody’s Channel Strip: iZotope RX Spectral DeNoise – iZotope RX Mouth DeClick – UA Neve 1073 – UA LA2A – UA 1176E

    Chris’ Mic & Voice Chain: Slate ML1 – Apollo – UA – Slate VMR (FG12, FG73, API Eq, SSL 4kE) – iZotope RX Voice – DeNoise
    Chris’ Channel Strip: Eventide Precision Time Align – iZotope RX Spectral DeNoise – iZotope RX Mouth DeClick – UA Neve 1073 – UA LA2A – UA 1176E

    Master: Oek Sound Soothe 2 – iZotope Ozone Imager – iZotope Ozone Maximize.

    ******************************

    If you want to collaborate, sponsor a podcast, donate, or want us to review your product – contact us at: collaborate@insidetherecordingstudio.com


  • February 10, 2026
    Tuesday Tips, Vocals

    Grouping Background Vocals for Better Mix Control


    If your background vocals tend to fight the lead instead of lifting it, this quick walkthrough shows how to turn complexity into clarity.

    In this Tuesday Tip, Jody breaks down how he handles a session with 18 background vocals, covering how they’re grouped, panned, bussed, and processed so they actually help the song instead of wrecking the mix. The focus stays practical: making those vocals feel big, wide, and supportive while keeping the lead vocal front and center.


  • February 6, 2026
    Vocals

    Big Background Vocals: How to Build Massive Vocal Stacks



    Background vocals are supposed to sound huge, not like a group text gone wrong.

    In this episode of Inside the Recording Studio, Chris and Jody tackle the surprisingly tricky world of big background vocals, from towering vocal stacks to rowdy gang vocals that sound like they might knock something over. If you’ve ever added “just one more harmony” and suddenly lost all clarity, this one’s for you.

    They start by answering a deceptively simple question: what kind of background vocals does your song actually need?Not every track wants a stadium-sized choir, and not every chorus survives being buried under twelve takes. Chris and Jody break down how background vocals function across genres and why restraint can sometimes hit harder than excess.

    The discussion quickly turns to producer tendencies, some obsess over timing, some over pitch, and some spiral into fixing both until the emotion disappears. Chris points out how chasing perfection can kill the very thing background vocals are meant to add: energy. Jody shares how he keeps large vocal stacks feeling exciting without letting them turn into a technical nightmare.

    You’ll also hear practical advice on treating massive vocal stacks once they’re recorded. When do you keep them tight and centered? When do you spread them wide? The mono-versus-stereo debate comes into play, with clear examples of how each choice affects impact and clarity. They also dig into effects that make background vocals feel alive, while warning against overdoing it and ending up with a cloudy mix.

    One of the highlights is their breakdown of common background vocal mistakes. Over-stacking without a plan, ignoring blend, and slapping effects on everything can turn a “wall of sound” into, as they put it, “mud on toast.” The fixes are simpler than you think, especially if you’re working in a home studio environment.

    Along the way, they shout out legendary producers and bands known for their background vocal work, using those references to explain what makes big vocals last beyond trends. The focus stays practical and usable, no theory rabbit holes, no gear worship, just techniques that translate directly into better mixes.

    Whether you’re layering harmonies in a bedroom studio or tracking a full gang vocal, this episode gives you recording setup tips and mix strategies that actually work in the real world.

    Stick around for Friday Finds, the Gold Star word, and the usual nonsense, and then go stack some vocals with confidence.

    Subscribe so you don’t miss next week’s studio deep dive.

    ******************************

    Gear we used:
    Jody’s Mic & Voice Chain: Telefunken C12 – Groove Tubes Vipre – Apollo – UA Neve 1073 – UA LA2A – UA Studer A800
    Jody’s Channel Strip: iZotope RX Spectral DeNoise – iZotope RX Mouth DeClick – UA Neve 1073 – UA LA2A – UA 1176E

    Chris’ Mic & Voice Chain: Slate ML1 – Apollo – UA – Slate VMR (FG12, FG73, API Eq, SSL 4kE) – iZotope RX Voice – DeNoise
    Chris’ Channel Strip: Eventide Precision Time Align – iZotope RX Spectral DeNoise – iZotope RX Mouth DeClick – UA Neve 1073 – UA LA2A – UA 1176E

    Master: Oek Sound Soothe 2 – iZotope Ozone Imager – iZotope Ozone Maximize.

    ******************************

    If you want to collaborate, sponsor a podcast, donate, or want us to review your product – contact us at: collaborate@insidetherecordingstudio.com


1 2 3 … 139
Next Page
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • YouTube

Subscribe to Podcast

Apple Podcasts
RSS
More Subscribe Options
FeedSpot calls us a Top Recording Studio Podcast
Million Podcasts calls us a Best Recording Studio Podcast.

© 2020-2026 Inside the Recording Studio