
Ep10 - Self-Recording Vocals at Home: Tips, Fails & Funny Truths
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Narrated by:
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About this listen
This week, we’re turning the mic around—literally.
Chris and Steve explore what it’s really like to record vocals on your own, in a home studio setup where you’re the singer, engineer, and producer… all at once. From gear choices and room noise to workflow hacks and accidental plumbing victories, this episode is both practical and painfully relatable. If you’ve ever chased the perfect take while dodging noisy kids, furnace hums, or the neighbor’s lawnmower—this one’s for you.
Self-recording is equal parts freedom and frustration, but with the right mindset (and a bit of creativity), it can also be incredibly rewarding.
You'll Learn:
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How to choose the right mic when recording yourself
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Why committing effects while tracking can actually be freeing
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Tips for building a self-recording workflow that won’t kill your vibe
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How to control tone with mic distance and positioning
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Ways to deal with room noise, family noise, and fan noise
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Why using two different mics for lead and background vocals can help your mix
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How to stay creative (and sane) while recording solo
Topics & Stories:
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The reality of tracking vocals in a non-soundproofed house
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What to do when your perfect take is ruined by kitchen chaos
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Using mic position and off-axis techniques to tame harshness
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The joy of experimenting when no one’s watching
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How Chris’s plumbing failure turned into a vocal tracking lesson
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Workflow hacks: wireless control, DAW shortcuts, and phone/tablet remotes
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Using different mics—or even different mic angles—for variety in background vocals
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Why your forehead might actually sound great (don’t ask)
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Embracing late-night sessions and finding the quietest window to record
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Dealing with the curveballs of self-engineering: distractions, delays, and duct-taped mic tricks
Listener Q&A:
Lyndon Aguilar from Manila asks: “Can you mix with closed-back headphones without using any of the AI sound-reference tools?”
Chris and Steve unpack the pros and cons, when they’d use them, and why headphone EQ (with or without emulation) makes a big difference—especially outside of the studio.
Final Takeaway:
Recording yourself is a creative playground—messy, unpredictable, but full of freedom. Set up a workflow that inspires you, control what you can, and embrace the rest. Some of your best takes will come from the most unexpected moments.
🎧 Ready to capture pro-quality tracks—without upgrading your gear?
Pro Home Recording with Cubase shows you how to get clean, polished recordings using the tools you already have.
From setting up Cubase properly to recording vocals, drums, guitars, and more—this course gives you a clear, step-by-step workflow that saves you hours of frustration and makes your tracks easier to mix.
➡️ Start recording like a pro with the tools you already own.
Check out PRO HOME RECORDING WITH CUBASE
📢 What’s your biggest struggle when recording yourself?
Let us know in the comments or tag us on socials—we’d love to hear from you!
Got a question for a future episode?
📩 Submit your question here: Form Link
We’ll answer as many as we can in upcoming shows.