Recording vocals after midnight
The quiet hours are the best hours. A practical setup for tracking clean vocals when the building is yours.
There is a reason so many vocal takes happen late. The building is quiet, the street is quiet, and your voice does something different when nobody is waiting on you. If you can, book the room for the small hours and use the calm.
A treated booth takes care of the room tone, so the only thing left to manage is you. Warm up before you arrive. Set your levels once and leave them. Then sing like the take counts, because the first honest pass usually does.
A setup that stays out of the way
Get a rough headphone mix you actually enjoy, print a scratch take, and comp later. Keep water close, keep the pop filter a fist away, and resist the urge to fix every breath in real time. Capture the performance now, edit it tomorrow.
When you are done, bounce a rough to your phone and listen on the way home. Sleep on it. The midnight take that felt perfect sometimes needs one more pass, and the one you almost deleted is often the keeper.
Your next session starts now
Book online, unlock by phone, and walk into a room that is ready when you are.
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