Making a Scene Presents Podcast Por Richard LHommedieu arte de portada

Making a Scene Presents

Making a Scene Presents

De: Richard LHommedieu
Escúchala gratis

Making a Scene is the #1 Resource for the Indie Artist and the Fans that Love them! http://www.makingascene.org2019 Midnight Circus Productions Música
Episodios
  • A Buyer’s Guide to Recording Interfaces
    Apr 4 2026

    Making a Scene Presents - A Buyer’s Guide to Recording Interfaces
    The Box That Decides Whether Your Studio Feels Fast or Feels Broken

    There is a certain kind of gear mistake that musicians make all the time. They obsess over microphones, plugins, monitors, and shiny rack toys, then they treat the recording interface like a boring utility purchase. That is backward. Your interface is the center of the studio. It is the box that decides how your microphone gets into the computer, how your speakers get fed, how your headphones behave, how low your latency feels, how your outboard gear connects, and how easy it will be to grow from a simple home setup into a serious project studio. Pick the right one and the whole room feels smooth. Pick the wrong one and everything becomes friction.

    http://www.makingascene.org

    Más Menos
    20 m
  • Interview with the Avery Set
    Apr 4 2026

    Making a Scene Presents an Interview with the Avery Set

    The Avery Set began in the early 2000s in Frankenmuth, Michigan, growing out of a close friendship between Chris (lead singer) and Jake (drummer). What started as two friends making noise quickly turned into a real band with a shared sense of purpose—writing songs, chasing shows, and building a sound that felt honest and lived-in.

    In 2006, the band released their debut record, Wishful Thinking, capturing the early energy of a group finding its voice. A year later, in 2007, The Avery Set relocated to Nashville, a move that pushed the band into new rooms, new influences, and a wider circle of musicians. With an expanded lineup, they released Returning to Steam in 2009, a record that marked a clear step forward in confidence and craft.

    http://www.makingascene.org

    Más Menos
    1 h y 8 m
  • Subtractive EQ vs Additive EQ: The Secret to Clean Mixes
    Apr 1 2026

    Making a Scene Presents - Subtractive EQ vs Additive EQ: The Secret to Clean Mixes

    There is a reason so many home studio mixes sound busy, cloudy, and weirdly tired even when every track is “exciting” on its own. It is not always the mic. It is not always the room. It is not always that you need some expensive boutique plugin blessed by a guy on YouTube wearing a beanie in July. A lot of the time, the problem is simpler and a little more humbling. We boost before we listen. We decorate before we clean. We keep reaching for more when the track is begging for less. That is where subtractive EQ comes in, and it is why this one move can make a mix feel more expensive, more open, and more professional without adding a single new sound. Fender Studio Pro is built on the Studio One platform, and Fender’s current Studio Pro pages describe its Standard EQ as a parametric EQ with dynamic EQ and visual feedback, while the platform also includes broader mix tools like multiband dynamics and a modernized workflow in version 8. That makes it a very good place to learn restraint instead of hype.

    http://www.makingascene.org

    Más Menos
    22 m
Todavía no hay opiniones