• Uncovering the Secrets of Clipping Audio – A Noisy Adventure



    Clipping: the word alone can make engineers break into a sweat. But is it always bad? In this episode of Inside the Recording Studio, Chris and Jody dive into the art of clipping audio—where it comes from, why it sometimes works, and when it can absolutely ruin your mix.

    They start with the origins: how analog gear and early digital systems introduced us to clipping, and why those “mistakes” sometimes turned into creative tools. Then they dig into the different types of clipping—hard clipping, soft clipping, analog saturation—and explain how each one shapes sound differently.

    Clipping isn’t just an error; it can be a weapon. Chris and Jody share when they intentionally use clipping to add aggression, density, or perceived loudness to drums, guitars, or even a mix bus. At the same time, they cover the dangers: digital clipping that destroys transients, leaves tracks brittle, and makes mastering engineers cry.

    Expect real-world recording setup tips, plugin and hardware examples, and honest insight into how they personally use clipping in their own sessions. And of course, it wouldn’t be an Inside the Recording Studio episode without humor—so yes, there will be some nonsense about how clipping is like hot sauce: a little makes things exciting, too much ruins dinner.

    Whether you’re working with home studio gear or high-end mastering chains, this episode gives you the tools to understand clipping, control it, and use it creatively without wrecking your mixes.

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    Gear we used:
    Jody’s Mic & Voice Chain: Telefunken C12 – Groove Tubes Vipre – ApolloUA 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 – ApolloUA – 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 2iZotope Ozone Imager – iZotope Ozone Maximize.

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

  • From Echo to Epic: The Simple Guide to Creative Delay Use



    A canyon.
    You stand at its edge, lean forward, and shout.
    The sound leaves you, racing into stone and shadow. It comes back—changed. Softer. Later. A reflection of yourself stretched across time. This is delay.

    But in music, delay is not just echo. It is dialogue. A conversation between the sound and its ghost. Sometimes it whispers, sometimes it shouts back in rhythmic precision. Sometimes it trails endlessly until it dissolves into nothing. Every repeat carries a choice, and every choice reshapes the song.

    Chris and Jody invite you into this canyon of echoes. Together they rappel into its depths, lanterns in hand, exploring the many chambers delay has carved into the history of recorded sound.

    They begin with types. Analog delays, warm and decaying like fading footsteps. Tape delays, wobbling and imperfect, rich with the nostalgia of reels spinning. Digital delays, pristine and exact, each repeat a mirror with no cracks. Ping-pong delays, bouncing like voices across canyon walls. Slapback delays, short and brash, the swagger of rockabilly ghosts. Each type has a personality, a flavor, a way of coloring the song’s atmosphere.

    But types are only the start. The true power lies in time. The choice of milliseconds changes everything. A short slapback can make a vocal punch forward, bold and present. A dotted-eighth delay can weave rhythm into guitar lines, turning simple notes into hypnotic patterns. A long, decaying delay can stretch a single phrase into a landscape, where sound becomes mood and mood becomes memory.

    Delay is not passive. It is a sculptor. It shapes space within the mix. Too much, and the canyon drowns in noise. Too little, and the track feels dry, stripped of dimension. The art is in balance—choosing when to let the echoes step forward, and when to pull them back behind the curtain.

    Chris and Jody also explore the practical: the way a producer sets up sends and returns, the way feedback and filters can tame or exaggerate repeats, the way delays interact with reverb to create depth—or chaos. They talk about pushing delays into delays, creating fractals of echoes that spin outward like ripples on water. These are tricks that can turn ordinary sounds into something cinematic.

    Yet, beyond the knobs and settings, delay is a feeling. It can make a song intimate, as if the singer is sitting across from you, words bouncing gently off the walls. It can make a song vast, stretching out into infinite space, every repeat a reminder that music doesn’t end when the note stops—it lingers, it breathes, it returns.

    So, come canyoneering with Chris and Jody. Step into the slot canyons of sound. Learn not only what delays are and how they work, but how to use them as paintbrushes, storytellers, mirrors. Because in the end, delay is more than an effect. It is time bent into music. And the echoes you send into the canyon might just come back as something greater than you imagined.

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    Gear we used:
    Jody’s Mic & Voice Chain: Telefunken C12 – Groove Tubes Vipre – ApolloUA 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 – ApolloUA – 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 2iZotope Ozone Imager – iZotope Ozone Maximize.

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

  • Introducing the Hyperswitch from Seymour Duncan



    Imagine this: you grab your trusty guitar, flip your 5-way switch, and get… the same five tones you’ve had since forever. Useful, sure. Exciting? Not really. Now imagine if that same switch suddenly had superpowers—like a Marvel character but with fewer capes and more coil-splits. That’s the Seymour Duncan Hyperswitch, and Chris and Jody are here to spill the beans on this new toy that might make you rethink everything you know about guitar wiring.

    First off, let’s be clear: this thing is not your granddad’s pickup selector. Nope. The Hyperswitch uses Bluetooth and an app, which means you can rewire your humbuckers without touching a soldering iron. That’s right—no more burning your fingers or pretending you know how to read wiring diagrams. With the Hyperswitch, you can sit on your couch, phone in hand, and turn your guitar into a Franken-beast of tonal options. Series? Done. Parallel? Easy. Coil-split? Obviously. Want to invent a configuration that would make even a veteran guitar tech weep? Go for it.

    Chris and Jody break down what it actually is, how it works, and (most importantly for us mortals) how hard it is to install. Spoiler alert: it’s surprisingly painless. If you can handle a screwdriver and not lose a screw under your couch, you’re probably halfway there. They’ll also share their own thoughts on how this thing changes the game for players with multiple humbuckers—because let’s face it, once you’ve got the Hyperswitch, your guitar stops being “just a guitar” and becomes a sonic buffet.

    But don’t worry, this isn’t a dry tech manual. Expect plenty of gear-nerd jokes and some playful digs at the “old-school” solder-or-die crowd. (You know the ones—folks who say “if you didn’t melt at least one fingertip installing it, did you even earn your tone?”). Chris and Jody are here to tell you: yes, you did. The Hyperswitch lets you have all the fun without the scars.

    And then there’s the bigger picture: this little piece of tech is destined for greatness. Seriously. Imagine walking into a studio session and saying, “Yeah, I’ll just Bluetooth my wiring real quick.” Your bandmates will either think you’re a wizard or they’ll immediately start plotting to steal your guitar. Either way, you win.

    In this episode, you’ll get the full rig rundown: what the Hyperswitch can do, how to get it set up, and why it might just ruin you for every boring old 5-way switch from now on. Plus, Chris and Jody toss in their trademark banter and nonsense—because if you can’t laugh about turning your guitar into a Bluetooth-enabled spaceship, what’s even the point?

    So if you’ve ever looked at your guitar and thought, “Man, I wish you could do more,” this is your episode. The Seymour Duncan Hyperswitch doesn’t just answer that wish—it cranks it to 11 and asks, “What else ya got?”

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    Gear we used:
    Jody’s Mic & Voice Chain: Telefunken C12 – Groove Tubes Vipre – ApolloUA 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 – ApolloUA – 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 2iZotope Ozone Imager – iZotope Ozone Maximize.

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

  • Time to Level Up Your Sound: How to Know When it’s Time for an Audio Interface Upgrade!



    Your audio interface is the beating heart of your recording setup. It’s the bridge between your ideas and the outside world. But how do you know when it’s time to move on from your trusty box of converters and preamps? In this episode of Inside the Recording Studio, Chris and Jody dive deep into the dos and don’ts of upgrading your audio interface.

    They start with the practical signs: crackling noises, limited input options, driver instability, or simply realizing your current interface is holding back the potential of your mixes. From there, they expand into the creative benefits of upgrading—better converters, more reliable latency, improved headphone amps, and the kind of clarity that makes vocals and instruments sit more naturally in the mix.

    But upgrading isn’t just about throwing money at shiny new gear. Chris and Jody stress the importance of identifying what you actually need. Do you need more channels for recording a live band? Higher sample rates for orchestral work? Or just a cleaner, simpler workflow for podcasting and production? They’ll also cover the common traps—when upgrading is unnecessary, when it’s better to optimize your workflow first, and when the problem isn’t the interface but your room acoustics, gain staging, or even user error.

    Along the way, you’ll hear practical recording setup tips and even some audio interface troubleshooting tricks that might save you from upgrading too soon. And, true to form, there’s humor and storytelling sprinkled throughout, because no Inside the Recording Studio episode is complete without a bit of nonsense.

    Whether you’re working with budget home studio gear or eyeing a flagship unit, this episode gives you clarity on when to make the leap—and when to hold tight to what you’ve got.

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    Gear we used:
    Jody’s Mic & Voice Chain: Telefunken C12 – Groove Tubes Vipre – ApolloUA 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 – ApolloUA – 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 2iZotope 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