Episodes

  • AI in the Studio: What’s Useful, What’s Weird, What’s Coming
    Jan 16 2026

    AI is no longer a “someday” conversation. It’s already baked into tools we use, workflows we rely on, and decisions we’re making in the home studio, whether we call it AI or not.

    In this episode, we break the whole thing down like producers, not philosophers. Where does AI actually help? Where does it get in the way? And what parts of the process still need a human with taste, intention, and a point of view?

    What We Dig Into
    • The moment AI went from “cool trick” to “daily reality”

    • Songwriting vs demoing: where AI can speed things up fast

    • Why AI drums still don’t feel like a real drummer (even after editing)

    • Production mindset shift: “I can fix that later” as a creative unlock

    • Mixing with AI-assisted plugins: when it’s just a better starting point

    • Mastering with Ozone: why “perfect” doesn’t always sound right

    • The difference between tools, presets, and true AI (and why it’s confusing)

    Topics & Stories
    • The “Canadian sorry” story that completely broke a comedian’s set

    • The “Cindy/Sandy Winters” AI song moment and the emotional reaction

    • The reality check: the audience might not care, but you might

    • “Everything is AI now” marketing and how to filter the noise

    Listener Q&A

    No listener Q&A this one, but we want your questions for the next episodes.

    Final Takeaway

    AI can make you faster. It can even make you better. But it still can’t replace the one thing that makes your music yours: taste, intent, and human perspective. Use it like a tool, not like a replacement.

    👉 Got a question for us?
    📩 Submit it here: Form Link
    We’ll answer as many as we can in upcoming shows.

    And if you’re digging the show, hit follow/subscribe and leave a quick review.
    It really helps more home studio folks find Studio Stuff.

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    33 mins
  • Ep 29 - Fix, Control, Enhance: The Vocal Framework Your Mix Is Missing
    Jan 9 2026

    Alright… let’s talk about the question we hear constantly: “How many plugins do you use on a vocal chain?”
    Because the real answer isn’t a number. It’s a mindset.

    In this episode, we zoom out and talk about the categories of vocal processing that actually matter: fixing what’s broken, controlling dynamics, shaping tone, then adding space and vibe. We walk through how we think about order of operations (clip gain ➝ corrective EQ ➝ compression ➝ enhancement ➝ effects), why multiple “small” moves often beat one aggressive plugin, and how to stop chasing a “radio vocal” by stacking random inserts.

    Also, we may or may not compare vocals to… turds. (You’ll understand.)

    You’ll Learn:
    • Why plugin count is misleading (and what to focus on instead)

    • The “Fix ➝ Control ➝ Enhance ➝ Effects” framework for vocals

    • Why corrective EQ before compression often makes mixing easier

    • How we think about two-stage compression (peaks vs leveling)

    • When a second de-esser makes sense (and why it’s not “wrong”)

    • How EQ placement changes everything once a vocal is controlled

    Topics & Stories:
    • WhatsApp vs Signal vs Marco Polo… and “your everyday podcast friend”

    • The “make all your turds a similar size” clip gain philosophy

    • Steve’s Pro Tools insert situation (in the year of our Lord 2026)

    • “Salt is awesome… until it’s too much” (aka over-processing)

    Final Takeaway:

    Stop asking, “How many plugins do I need?”
    Start asking, “What am I trying to achieve right now?”
    Fix what’s distracting, control what’s unstable, enhance what’s worth highlighting, then add space that serves the song.

    👉 Got a question for us?
    📩 Submit it here: Form Link
    We’ll answer as many as we can in upcoming shows.

    And if you’re digging the show, hit follow/subscribe and leave a quick review.
    It really helps more home studio folks find Studio Stuff.

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    27 mins
  • Ep 28 - Before You Buy Another Plugin, Ask This One Question
    Dec 13 2025

    We started this episode sipping tea and joking around… and somehow ended up in a full-on therapy session about plugins.

    A listener comment kicked it off: “Sometimes it feels like I spend more time buying and setting up plugins than making music.” Yep. Been there. So we unpack where that urge comes from, why the “next plugin” feels like it’ll fix everything, and how we personally draw the line between useful tools and dopamine shopping.

    And to make it extra practical, we answer a listener question about oversampling: what it is, when it matters, why it can reduce aliasing, and why enabling it everywhere can absolutely destroy your CPU.

    Special thanks to our sponsor, Audient. https://audient.com/

    What We Dig Into:
    • The biggest reasons we keep buying “one more plugin”

    • How to tell if a plugin is actually helping your mixes (or just your mood)

    • Why we still reach for the same familiar tools most of the time

    • A simple rule to decide when a new plugin is worth it

    • What oversampling is (and what aliasing actually means)

    • When oversampling matters most (and when it’s overkill)

    Topics & Stories:
    • “How do they make decaf coffee?” becomes a philosophy debate

    • The “collection” trap: buy 2 more, save more, own everything

    • Seeing a plugin you forgot you already bought (painful… and real)

    • The “24 tracks” question: how many different EQs and compressors are you actually using?

    • Why “good-looking plugins” can weirdly influence creativity

    • AI plugins as the next “take my money” wave

    Listener Q&A:

    Oversampling in plugins:
    Where to use it, why it can reduce aliasing in non-linear processing (saturation/limiters), and why it’s usually not a make-or-break factor for your mixes.

    Final Takeaway:

    Plugins aren’t going to save you. If you buy one, buy it on purpose: save time, solve a real problem, or unlock a sound you truly can’t get otherwise. And for oversampling… understand it, use it selectively, and don’t let it become the new rabbit hole.

    👉 Got a question for us?
    📩 Submit it here: Form Link
    We’ll answer as many as we can in upcoming shows.

    And if you’re digging the show, hit follow/subscribe and leave a quick review.
    It really helps more home studio folks find Studio Stuff.

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    38 mins
  • Ep 27 - The 1 Reverb Rule That Changes the Whole Mix
    Dec 3 2025

    What happens when 17 mixers take the exact same piano-and-vocal song… and all make different reverb choices? In this episode, we break down a recent Mixdown Coaching Community mix challenge where one vocal reverb decision, or a tiny change to piano tone, completely shifted the emotion of the whole track.

    We talk about why elements like vocal reverb, piano EQ, kick and snare act like “tone anchors” for your mix, why great recordings almost feel like they “mix themselves,” and how your personal taste (EDM, orchestral, analog head, etc.) shows up in every decision you make.

    Plus, we tackle a listener question on pre vs post-fader sends and automation—and why we’re almost always in the post-fader camp.

    Special thanks to our sponsor, Audient.

    You’ll Learn:
    • Why vocal reverb can tilt the entire emotional center of a mix

    • How piano EQ and ambience instantly change the tone of a song

    • What happens when 17 mixers tackle the same stems with different tastes

    • Why great performances and recordings “mix faster” and need less fixing

    • The difference between mixing the song vs. mixing the plugin chain

    • How to think about pre vs post-fader sends when automating reverbs and effects

    Topics & Stories:
    • The MCC mix challenge: 17 versions of the same Malina track

    • The one “roomy vocal” mix that made the whole track feel warmer and closer

    • Bright vs warm piano choices on Steve’s heavily-modded Yamaha C7

    • The EDM-style timed delay on piano that changed the groove completely

    • The vintage, mid-focused vocal mix vs the more hi-fi, digital-leaning takes

    • Why we’re seeing MCC members’ mixes get closer and more “mature” over time

    • Good song + good performance + good recording = the mix almost does itself

    • The danger of “barbecue sauce on everything” vs respecting the tracks you’re given

    Listener Q&A:

    Question:
    “Can you go deeper into pre vs post-fader when automating sends to reverb and delay? When does pre-fader actually make sense?”

    We talk about:

    • Why we almost always use post-fader sends on lead vocals and key elements

    • How post-fader keeps your EQ, compression, and tone decisions feeding the reverb

    • Rare cases where pre-fader could make sense (parallel/VCA-style setups)

    • Why it’s better to think musically than to obsess over “purist” routing choices

    Final Takeaway:

    Reverb isn’t just “space.” It’s emotion.
    On a vocal-driven song, your reverb choice can quietly decide whether the whole mix feels intimate, epic, cold, warm, vintage, or modern.

    The more you respect the song, the performance, and the stems you’re handed, the more your mixes start to sound mature—not because you used the fanciest plugin chain, but because every decision serves the story.

    👉 Got a question for us?
    📩 Submit it here: Form Link
    We’ll answer as many as we can in upcoming shows.

    And if you’re digging the show, hit follow/subscribe and leave a quick review.
    It really helps more home studio folks find Studio Stuff.

    Show More Show Less
    29 mins
  • Ep 26 - Mix Bus Magic: Why We Compress, Tape, Limit… and When Not To
    Nov 7 2025

    We get asked this a lot: “Why put stuff on the mix bus?” Today we unpack the why and the how—from gentle bus compression that makes tracks move together, to tasteful EQ and tape for mojo, to mixing into a limiter for vibe without boxing in the master. Then we tackle Demo Syndrome—when clients fall in love with the rough—and share how we reset ears, separate taste from problems, and keep momentum.

    Special thanks to our sponsor, Audient.

    You’ll Learn:

    • Why mixing into a bus chain changes your decisions (in a good way)

    • The compression settings we start with for real “glue” and movement

    • When bus EQ solves tone—and when it just points you to the real problem

    • How and where we use tape on the bus for character without mush

    • Why a limiter can help while mixing but should be bypassed before mastering

    • Practical steps to beat Demo Syndrome and get client buy-in

    Topics & Stories:

    • “Set it early, watch the meters”: not painting yourself into a corner

    • Dual-mono vs. linked compression and when extra movement helps

    • The “air & earth” cheats we reach for (and when to leave it for mastering)

    • Using AI mastering chains as ideas rather than a one-click finish

    • Chris’s grand-dad naming crisis (“Dude” didn’t age well)

    • Audient love: iD line + ASP preamps, and hardware-hosted room correction

    Listener Q&A:

    A simple but killer question: “Why do I need anything on my mix bus?” We break down the musical reasons (glue, tone, movement) and the workflow wins, plus how we avoid stepping on the mastering stage.

    Final Takeaway:

    Start with intention. Put your bus tools on early, mix into them lightly, and let them guide better track-level moves. And when Demo Syndrome hits, buy time, test both versions, and keep what truly serves the song.

    👉 Got a question for us?
    📩 Submit it here: Form Link
    We’ll answer as many as we can in upcoming shows.

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    37 mins
  • Ep 25 - Studio Slang Decoded: What “Depth,” “Glue,” and “Vibe” Actually Mean
    Oct 30 2025

    We all say it: “It’s muddy.” “Needs glue.” “Give it more space.” But what does that actually mean in practice? In this episode, we translate the most common mixer speak into specific moves you can make today, then answer a listener question on adding space without using reverb.


    You’ll Learn:

    • Where “mud” actually lives (150–200 Hz for many sources, 250–500 Hz for mix buildup)

    • What “glue” really is (bus compression, shared ambience, subtle EQ)

    • How to create space without reverb: panning, subtractive EQ, smart delays

    • The difference between stems and multitracks (and when to send which)

    • Why “musical EQ” and “vibe & character” are real, even if you can’t meter them

    Topics & Stories:

    • Muddy vs boomy vs woolly (and why tiny cuts move mountains)

    • The smiley-face EQ era: why it sounded great… until it didn’t

    • Depth, width, and density: front/back/left/right as arrangement tools

    • “Crush the drums”: parallel, ceiling/floor, and when distortion equals energy

    • Filtering the send into a delay for cleaner “felt, not heard” space

    • Stems vs multitracks: live tracks, post, and keeping the “makeup” on

    • The “depth” pronunciation debate, dad jokes, and a drum “skin head” moment 🤦‍♂️


      Huge thanks to Audient Audio for supporting the show 👉 https://audient.com

    Listener Q&A:
    How do I add space without reverb?
    Our go-tos:

    • Panning first, then subtractive EQ (150–200 Hz and 2–8 kHz real estate)

    • Slapback or short stereo delays you feel more than hear

    • High-pass/low-pass the send feeding the delay for natural results

    Final Takeaway:
    Great mixes aren’t just louder or brighter, they’re organized. Give each element its own frequency lane and its own spot in the panorama, then use tiny bus moves to make the whole song breathe together.

    👉 Got a question for us?
    📩 Submit it here: Form Link
    We’ll answer as many as we can in upcoming shows.

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    32 mins
  • Ep 24 - Stop Inconsistent Mixes – Make Your Album Flow
    Oct 17 2025


    Ever finish an album and realize every song sounds… just a little different?
    Yeah... we’ve all been there. In this episode, we dig into how to keep a full record sounding cohesive without killing the vibe or getting lost in “template land.”

    We share our real-world album mixing workflow: how we craft a strong “first-song” mix, build a flexible mix template, what actually carries over between songs (and what definitely doesn’t), and how to reference yourself as you go so your record feels like one connected piece of art.

    Then we switch gears into room correction, do you really need it if you’ve already “learned” your room? We talk about what works, what doesn’t, and why acoustic treatment still beats software (but both can play nice together).

    You’ll Learn:

    • Why the first song sets the tone for the entire album

    • How to mix faster using a smart, flexible album template

    • What to copy between songs (drums, bass, lead vox) and what to rebuild

    • How to prevent “album drift” and keep your sound consistent

    • The truth about room correction vs. room treatment

    • How calibration tools can actually help dense rock or punk mixes

    Topics & Stories:

    • The joy of “Select All → Delete” to build a new mix template

    • Why we still reference earlier songs while mixing

    • Ballads vs. rockers: when reverb and ambience should change

    • Different studios, different drummers—how we tie it all together

    • The Denny’s breakfast redemption arc (we went back!)

    • Chris’s clouds are almost on the ceiling—progress!

    • Audient iD44 goes on a Euro trip: high-quality preamps in carry-on form

    Listener Q&A:

    Shoutout to Arthur from MCC for the album consistency question,
    and to Tomas from Norway for asking about room correction and calibration tools.

    Final Takeaway:

    Make your first mix the North Star for your album.
    Use smart templates, reference often, treat your room first, and let every song serve the record.
    Consistency doesn’t mean boring—it means connected.

    👉 Got a question for us?
    📩 Submit it here: Form Link
    We’ll answer as many as we can in upcoming shows.

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    33 mins
  • Ep 23 - Mix as You Go vs Start Fresh: Where Does Mixing Really Begin?
    Oct 11 2025


    Ever record with delays, reverbs, and panning to “get the vibe,” then wonder if you should wipe the slate clean before the final mix? In this episode we unpack where the mix actually begins—during tracking or at mixdown—and how we decide what to keep, what to reset, and why. Then we answer a great listener question about routing: should your FX sends (like drum reverbs) return to the drum bus or go straight to the mix bus?

    Huge thanks to Audient Audio for supporting the show 👉 https://audient.com

    You’ll Learn:

    • The benefits (and risks) of “mixing as you go” while recording

    • When we hit RESET at mix—and the few things we keep from the rough

    • How to build a recording template that sounds good with low latency

    • Why cue-mix psychology matters: give performers what helps them sing/play better

    • FX routing 101: returning sends to the instrument bus vs straight to the 2-bus

    • A simple VCA workaround if your FX aren’t following bus automation

    Topics & Stories:

    • Chris finally mounts the studio panels (they’re straight, which means… outside help 😅)

    • Tracking with performance-defining delays (hello, The Edge)

    • Steve’s take: compression/reverb in the cans can mess with feel (for some artists)

    • Jazz vs pop/rock: when we skip the drum bus—and when we go tight/together

    • Templates that won’t choke your session during tracking, but scale for mixing

    • Sponsor shout: Audient’s ORIA Mini gets a mention

    Listener Q&A:

    Shoutout to Neil Higgins! His question: “Should my FX sends return to the instrument bus (e.g., drums) or straight to the mix bus?”

    Short answer: Both can work. If FX return to the drum bus, they’ll ride and pump with drum-bus processing and automation—tighter, more cohesive. If they go to the mix bus, they’ll bypass drum-bus processing—often more open and independent. Choose by ear; a VCA pair (drum bus + drum FX) can keep automation in lockstep when split.

    Final Takeaway:
    There’s no single “correct” starting line for a mix. Be intentional: track with enough vibe to inspire, then decide whether to reset or build on it. For FX routing, pick the path that best serves how your buses are processing—and how you want elements to move.

    👉 Got a question for us?
    📩 Submit it here: Form Link
    We’ll answer as many as we can in upcoming shows.

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    31 mins