Category: Daily Goody

The Daily Goody is daily tip, fact, or lesson on podcast production. You can receive it daily or a weekly roundup with our dedicated newsletter.

  • Do You Feel Hurried or Chill When You Edit Your Podcast?

    Personally, I edit swiftly to knock out the work but I definitely don’t rush. I get in a zone and focus intently. I like editing so I definitely stay in a chill mood.

    You?

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    And please keep in mind, the Daily Goody is only a tiny little tip, fact or lesson everyday. Please don’t expect any of these posts to be long, earth-shattering masterpieces that instantly answer every single question you can think of and completely transform you into a world class podcast engineer. “Little by little, a little becomes a lot.”

  • One Participant Using a Condenser Mic, the Other Using a Dynamic Mic

    One thing to keep in mind when producing the audio of a podcast episode where one participant is using a condenser microphone the other participant is using a dynamic microphone:

    Because the condenser microphone sound will probably contain more high frequency information (clarity) than the dynamic microphone, in post-production you may want to roll off some high frequencies of the condenser microphone so that it better matches the sound of the dynamic microphone. Alternatively you could boost the high frequencies of the dynamic microphone to better match the two sounds. Or do a combination of both, of course.

    This isn’t alway necessary but it’s definitely something to keep in mind in this particular situation.

    Also, sometimes you will not know what microphones were used in an episode, so it’s worth reminding you of some fundamental audio production advice: ALWAYS rely on your ears to mix various sources of audio.

    Have often do you EQ voices to better match each other?

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    And please keep in mind, the Daily Goody is only a tiny little tip, fact or lesson everyday. Please don’t expect any of these posts to be long, earth-shattering masterpieces that instantly answer every single question you can think of and completely transform you into a world class podcast engineer. “Little by little, a little becomes a lot.”

  • 3 Different Categories of “Noise” to Avoid When Recording Podcasts

    1. Noise due to a bad microphone — scratchy, crunchy or distorted sound. This is extremely rare.

    2. Background noise from air vents, air conditioners, fans, cars driving by, etc. Avoid this by recording in a quiet environment.

    3. Bleed/Echo from other participants contaminating the recording due to a remote participant NOT wearing headphones or earbuds. The bleed/echo happens because their computer speakers’ audio goes directly into their microphone, causing an “echo” for all other participants as well as massive bleed of all other participants on the non-headphone-wearer’s recorded file, which of course is terrible and frankly unusable. Good recording services like Riverside, Squadcast, Zencastr, etc. offer Echo Cancellation for folks who are not using headphones/earbuds and this eliminates the bleed/echo — but this feature can also create a nasty muting/ducking effect when two or more participants speak over each other at the same time, and this is why no one should ever default to relying on this echo cancellation feature — every participant should ALWAYS wear headphones or earbuds, period, unless they literally don’t have any.

    May you avoid all these types of noise on your recordings and produce audio that sounds great!!!

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    And please keep in mind, the Daily Goody is only a tiny little tip, fact or lesson everyday. Please don’t expect any of these posts to be long, earth-shattering masterpieces that instantly answer every single question you can think of and completely transform you into a world class podcast engineer. “Little by little, a little becomes a lot.”

  • SplitEQ from Eventide

    SplitEQ from Eventide

    Eventide describes their SplitEQ plugin as “A New Era in Equalization,” which it actually seems to be! It was just released and it’s priced at $179, though it’s on sale now for $99. Find info, pics, videos and audio demonstrations HERE.

    Its unique feature: For each EQ band you can separately adjust the Transient information and the Tonal information. By applying EQ and panning to Transient and Tonal separately, you can fix many of the problems normally solved by using complex combinations of EQ, compression, transient designers, de-essers, multi-band compression, spatial processors, or dynamic EQ.

    From Eventide’s website:

    At first glance, it’s a parametric EQ with 8-bands of precise musical filters. What’s new and different is Eventide’s powerful Structural Split engine which divides the incoming audio into separate Transient and Tonal streams that feed the 8 bands. This approach makes common EQ problems easy to solve—even in a complex mix.

    • Want to soften the transients? Use the master Transient Gain slider.
    • Remove plosives or de-ess? EQ only the Transient.
    • Reduce snare ring? Put a filter on the Tonal mids.

    SplitEQ™ is a groundbreaking EQ that offers a fundamentally new approach to corrective and creative audio equalization. It excels at Repairing, Rebalancing, Enhancing, and Widening any musical source or audio signal. SplitEQ is both a surgical tool for fixing particularly nasty problems and a creative tool as it opens up exciting new musical possibilities. More than just an EQ — It’s a new and better tool.

    FYI, you can try this plugin for free.

    I’ll let you know my thoughts about it after I’ve used it a bit.

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    And please keep in mind, the Daily Goody is only a tiny little tip, fact or lesson everyday. Please don’t expect any of these posts to be long, earth-shattering masterpieces that instantly answer every single question you can think of and completely transform you into a world class podcast engineer. “Little by little, a little becomes a lot.”

  • Background Noise Is Exacerbated by Compression

    Using compression in post-production helps voices maintain a more consistent volume, but background noise is exacerbated and made louder by using compression.

    …which is why you ALWAYS want to record podcast hosts and guests with the LEAST amount of background noise possible! This includes everything – fans, air conditioners, air vents, outdoor noise, family members in the next room, chair squeaks, desk thumps, etc.

    How careful are you with regards to minimizing background noise?

    Want to receive the Daily Goody in your email, daily or weekly? Subscribe free here.

    And please keep in mind, the Daily Goody is only a tiny little tip, fact or lesson everyday. Please don’t expect any of these posts to be long, earth-shattering masterpieces that instantly answer every single question you can think of and completely transform you into a world class podcast engineer. “Little by little, a little becomes a lot.”

  • AKG K 240 MK II Stereo Studio Headphones

    AKG K 240 MK II Stereo Studio Headphones

    I’ve been using K240’s (not exclusively) since the beginning of my studio days in the early 90s.

    They’ve always been really good quality and cost less than $100!

    Good, solid headphones:

    • Over-ear design for comfort during long work sessions
    • Semi-open technology for solid bass and airy highs
    • Patented Varimotion 30 mm XXL transducer for accurate signal transfer and great dynamic range
    • Self-adjusting headband for optimum fit (*though some people don’t find them tight enough)

    Have you ever tried these?

    Want to receive the Daily Goody in your email, daily or weekly? Subscribe free here.

    And please keep in mind, the Daily Goody is only a tiny little tip, fact or lesson everyday. Please don’t expect any of these posts to be long, earth-shattering masterpieces that instantly answer every single question you can think of and completely transform you into a world class podcast engineer. “Little by little, a little becomes a lot.”

  • Name One Song That Sounds Amazing/Perfect to You

    Some songs are produced with such amazing sound that the song seems to transform into something MORE than just a song! Pure transcendence, you might say.

    What is one song that sounds amazing to you? …or 2 or 3 songs 😉 hehe

    Comment below.

    I’ll give you one of mine — Pneuma by Tool.

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    And please keep in mind, the Daily Goody is only a tiny little tip, fact or lesson everyday. Please don’t expect any of these posts to be long, earth-shattering masterpieces that instantly answer every single question you can think of and completely transform you into a world class podcast engineer. “Little by little, a little becomes a lot.”

  • Musicians Can Fund Their Music Careers by Earning $50-150 Per Hour Producing Podcasts From Home

    Earning over $100,000 per year is possible when producing podcasts from home. But you have to be a podcast audio professional and you have to find clients who can pay you what you’re worth — BOTH are possible!

    Musicians may want to learn how to produce podcasts professionally and earn great money working part-time from home which will give them plenty of free time to focus on their music creation.

    The clients ARE out there. High income levels ARE possible, IF someone is willing to become a true professional 😉

    What are your thoughts?

    Want to receive the Daily Goody in your email, daily or weekly? Subscribe free here.

    And please keep in mind, the Daily Goody is only a tiny little tip, fact or lesson everyday. Please don’t expect any of these posts to be long, earth-shattering masterpieces that instantly answer every single question you can think of and completely transform you into a world class podcast engineer. “Little by little, a little becomes a lot.”

  • What is Mastering in Podcast Production?

    Mastering, in general, is the final step of audio production in music, movies, podcasting, videos, etc.

    In podcasting, the main role of mastering is to set the final audio level of the episode to -19 LUFS (if mono) or -16 LUFS (if stereo).

    In addition to LUFS leveling, “crazy” people like me and many other accomplished podcast engineers take the opportunity in the mastering step to make additional tweaks to the audio using processors like EQ, compression, limiting, saturation, exciters, filtering and/or whatever else will make the episode sound even better.

    What does your mastering step consist of? Comment below 😉

    And if you’re interested, check out The History of Mastering.

    Want to receive the Daily Goody in your email, daily or weekly? Subscribe free here.

    And please keep in mind, the Daily Goody is only a tiny little tip, fact or lesson everyday. Please don’t expect any of these posts to be long, earth-shattering masterpieces that instantly answer every single question you can think of and completely transform you into a world class podcast engineer. “Little by little, a little becomes a lot.”

  • Using “Room Tone” When Editing Podcasts

    Room Tone is the slight background “noise” that is captured by a microphone when the podcast participant(s) is not talking or making any other noise.

    It can be handy to capture some of this room tone for the purpose of using it in post-production, if necessary, to elongate spaces between people speaking instead of inserting a 100% muted section of audio (which can sound unnatural and jarring).

    Personally I don’t deliberately record any room tone — some people do — but usually in a normal recording session there is at least 1-2 seconds of room tone on each person’s track which I can copy and paste somewhere if I need to.

    What’s your approach to room tone? Comment below.

    Want to receive the Daily Goody in your email, daily or weekly? Subscribe free here.

    And please keep in mind, the Daily Goody is only a tiny little tip, fact or lesson everyday. Please don’t expect any of these posts to be long, earth-shattering masterpieces that instantly answer every single question you can think of and completely transform you into a world class podcast engineer. “Little by little, a little becomes a lot.”

  • iZotope RX 9

    iZotope RX 9

    iZotope just released RX 9! RX is arguably the best software for cleaning up bad podcast audio via its 40+ modules, which include these classics: De-click, De-clip, De-hum, De-plosive, De-reverb, Mouth De-click, Voice De-noise. etc.

    What’s new in RX 9:

    • Improved Dialogue Isolate
    • A new Dynamic mode in De-hum
    • A new Complex mode in Ambience Match
    • Workflow enhancements including Restore Selection, Spectral Editor ARA For Logic Pro, Expandable History Pane.

    Regarding upgrading from RX 8 to RX 9, I’m probably not going to upgrade unless I feel the need for one of the new features in RX 9, which I don’t foresee at the moment.

    Want to receive the Daily Goody in your email, daily or weekly? Subscribe free here.

    And please keep in mind, the Daily Goody is only a tiny little tip, fact or lesson everyday. Please don’t expect any of these posts to be long, earth-shattering masterpieces that instantly answer every single question you can think of and completely transform you into a world class podcast engineer. “Little by little, a little becomes a lot.”

  • Bad Edits Are Terrible – Don’t Make Bad Edits!

    When editing a podcast:

    • Chopping off part of a word is a bad edit and sounds terrible.
    • Removing too much of the natural pause between a question and an answer (or between an answer and the next question) sounds unnatural and feels terrible.
    • Unskillfully removing umms can make a conversation’s pacing sound artificial and unnatural.
    • Removing “human” parts like laughing, pausing, struggling for a word, etc. can make a conversation sound sterile and lifeless.
    • Cutting breaths in half sounds weird and is disruptive.

    You get the idea.

    What other examples am I forgetting? Comment below, rockstar!

    Want to receive the Daily Goody in your email, daily or weekly? Subscribe free here.

    And please keep in mind, the Daily Goody is only a tiny little tip, fact or lesson everyday. Please don’t expect any of these posts to be long, earth-shattering masterpieces that instantly answer every single question you can think of and completely transform you into a world class podcast engineer. “Little by little, a little becomes a lot.”

  • Podcast Intro Music: How Loud Should It Be?

    It’s quite annoying when the intro music of a podcast is WAY louder than the hosts voice. This makes it difficult to hear the hosts voice clearly.

    It’s also quite annoying when the intro music comes in at a very low volume, which prompts listeners to jack up their listening volume, and then when the host starts talking their voice is SO LOUD compared to the music that listeners jump and hurry to turn down their listening volume.

    There is a happy medium and it’s the job of the podcast engineer/producer to properly mix the levels of the intro music and the host of the show.

    Generally speaking, the music should be loud enough to convey the effect it’s meant to convey, but not too loud where it drowns out the hosts voice.

    With a little attention, practice and reflection you can learn how to mix these levels really well and ALL listeners will APPRECIATE it without ever knowing that they’re appreciating it, which is the goal of professional audio production 😉 …and that’s a podcast engineer’s job well done!

    Want to receive the Daily Goody in your email, daily or weekly? Subscribe free here.

    And please keep in mind, the Daily Goody is only a tiny little tip, fact or lesson everyday. Please don’t expect any of these posts to be long, earth-shattering masterpieces that instantly answer every single question you can think of and completely transform you into a world class podcast engineer. “Little by little, a little becomes a lot.”

  • How to Make Decisions Regarding Buying New Plugins

    How to Make Decisions Regarding Buying New Plugins

    Buying your first 3rd party plugin (EQ, compressor, channel strip, etc) is a momentous occasion. Of course your DAW already has some processors built into it, but most 3rd party plugins are WAY better quality than those — easier to use, better sound, better user interface, etc.

    But, for some people, like ME!, once you start buying plugins it’s VERY easy to desire almost every single plugin you see.

    The question is: When should you fight this urge to buy another plugin vs going ahead and excitedly buying another plugin?

    Factors you may want to consider when deciding on the purchase of a particular plugin:

    • Do you have the money to buy the plugin?
    • Will you get significant use out of the plugin in question?
    • Do you already have a similar plugin that does almost everything that this new plugin will do?
    • Are you a plugin-aholic like Chris Curran??

    Answering those questions will help you decide.

    Also, keep in mind that using new/different plugins will also contribute to your continued learning, continued ear training, and your maturation into a seasoned podcast engineer/editor/etc. who possesses an audio “toolbox” full of top-notch “tools.” Take it from me, I’m a top-notch TOOL! ha

    What factors do you take into consideration? Comment below.

    Want to receive the Daily Goody in your email, daily or weekly? Subscribe free here.

    And please keep in mind, the Daily Goody is only a tiny little tip, fact or lesson everyday. Please don’t expect any of these posts to be long, earth-shattering masterpieces that instantly answer every single question you can think of and completely transform you into a world class podcast engineer. “Little by little, a little becomes a lot.”

  • Being Ready at Least 5-10 Minutes Before Each Recording Session

    The Boy Scout motto is: Be Prepared. This applies to every situation in life and it also applies to podcast recording sessions.

    When I say be ready at least 5-10 minutes before each session, I mean be COMPLETELY ready to go, now, right now.

    One of the worst things you can do is show up late, unprepared, and then make everyone else wait while you set up equipment, change various settings, turn off your phone, and get some water, etc.

    It shows respect to everyone else involved when you are PREPARED.

    It’s not difficult, either. And it will eliminate all those anxious feelings you feel when you show up last minute unprepared. That peace of mind alone is priceless 😉

    Do you have this habit?

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    And please keep in mind, the Daily Goody is only a tiny little tip, fact or lesson everyday. Please don’t expect any of these posts to be long, earth-shattering masterpieces that instantly answer every single question you can think of and completely transform you into a world class podcast engineer. “Little by little, a little becomes a lot.”

  • Remote Recording Using WiFi vs Ethernet Cable

    For convenience most people connect their computer to the internet using a WiFi connection. When it comes to recording good quality audio over the internet, a weak and/or unstable WiFi connection can potentially cause issues like dropouts, disconnections and synchronization drift. If the WiFi connection is strong there shouldn’t be any of these issues.

    A much faster and more stable connection method is to “hardwire” a computer to the internet using an ethernet cable connected to a modem or router. The resulting data throughput is much faster and smoother that using WiFi, which means there’s almost no chance of experiencing dropouts, disconnections or drift.

    I especially recommend being hardwired for podcast engineers/producers who are recording their clients’ sessions online using Riverside, Squadcast or Zencastr, etc.

    What’s your connection method and does it suffice?

    Want to receive the Daily Goody in your email, daily or weekly? Subscribe free here.

    And please keep in mind, the Daily Goody is only a tiny little tip, fact or lesson everyday. Please don’t expect any of these posts to be long, earth-shattering masterpieces that instantly answer every single question you can think of and completely transform you into a world class podcast engineer. “Little by little, a little becomes a lot.”

  • Captivate’s Interview Management & Guest Booking Platform Integrates With SquadCast

    Captivate is a podcast hosting platform with many good features and now they are offering their customers a free Interview Management & Guest Booking platform that integrates with SquadCast. Apparently when a guest books a session in the Captivate ecosystem, a SquadCast recording session will be automatically created. Pretty cool. I’m sure there are more cool features but this is brand new and I don’t have access to it to check it out myself.

    Details here.

    If you use Captivate we’d love to hear your experience with this in the comments 😉

    Want to receive the Daily Goody in your email, daily or weekly? Subscribe free here.

    And please keep in mind, the Daily Goody is only a tiny little tip, fact or lesson everyday. Please don’t expect any of these posts to be long, earth-shattering masterpieces that instantly answer every single question you can think of and completely transform you into a world class podcast engineer. “Little by little, a little becomes a lot.”

  • Gullfoss Master

    Gullfoss Master

    Since my original post on Gullfoss (Intelligent EQ from Soundtheory) they released a higher resolution version for “mastering” a few months ago. Check out this video overview of Gullfoss Master (priced at $199).

    For podcast production I don’t use Gullfoss that often but when I need to fix some really bad audio (which is all too common in podcasting) Gullfoss usually helps quite a bit.

    Here’s a very helpful excerpt from this Sound on Sound article:

    Gullfoss, the innovative ‘automatic EQ’ plug-in from Soundtheory, has just been made available in a Master edition, completing what is now a trilogy alongside Gullfoss Standard and Gullfoss Live.

    We reviewed the original version of Gullfoss back in 2018, and were so impressed that we included it in that year’s Gear Of The Year round-up, as well as our recent 100 Plug-ins Every Engineer Should Try feature. It’s essentially a multiband dynamics processor, but while it presents the user with a familiar EQ-like interface and controls, under the hood it uses a mathematical model of human auditory perception to increase or decrease your audio’s apparent brightness, eliminate temporal masking, and even remove unpleasant resonances — all while sounding natural and “artifact-free”. Its inner workings (devised by mathematical physicist Andreas Tell) are far from intuitive, but in use we’ve found it to be perhaps the closest thing yet to a ‘make better’ plug-in, with SOS Executive Editor Paul White calling it “addictive”, and SOS Publisher Dave Lockwood lauding its ability to “tame resonances that you didn’t know were there until you hear them taken away, and somehow emphasize all the nicest bits of a sound without making it any louder.”

    All three Gullfoss versions share the same processing, but have been subtly tweaked to better equip them for different roles. Gullfoss Standard is the most versatile, and trades off accuracy against CPU usage, while the new Gullfoss Master places higher demands on your computer’s resources but employs an “extended auditory model tuned for mastering”, and also presents the user with finer control resolution. The Live version of Gullfoss, meanwhile, applies less transient processing and can thus run at a lower latency of 2ms (compared with the other versions’ 20ms).

    Happily, you don’t need to make the choice as to which version to buy: a single Gullfoss license authorizes all three versions, so you can pick and choose depending on your workflow. Existing users of Gullfoss will also be entitled to install the new Master edition.

    The Gullfoss trilogy is available now, priced at $199

    Try Gullfoss for Free! An iLok account and the iLok License Manager is required (they are free). The trial is fully functional and lasts for two weeks.

    Want to receive the Daily Goody in your email, daily or weekly? Subscribe free here.

    And please keep in mind, the Daily Goody is only a tiny little tip, fact or lesson everyday. Please don’t expect any of these posts to be long, earth-shattering masterpieces that instantly answer every single question you can think of and completely transform you into a world class podcast engineer. “Little by little, a little becomes a lot.”

  • Sound Absorbing Items in Your Recording Space

    Your audio will sound clearer and more intelligible if you reduce the amount of reflections (reverb) in your recording space.

    Reflections are the sound bouncing off walls, floors, etc. and create the effect known as reverb. This makes you sound like you’re far away from your microphone in a large hall or 40 feet down a hallway and makes you much less intelligible to listeners.

    If the surfaces of your walls and floors etc. are reflective (hardwood floors, bare walls, etc), the sound will continue bouncing around from wall to wall etc. until gradually it loses its energy over time, usually 1-2 seconds. The more the surfaces in your space are covered with sound absorbing materials, the less reverb you’ll capture in your microphone, therefor creating a much better listening experience for your listeners.

    Here are some common absorbing materials you can use in your space: Carpeting, area rugs, curtains, soft furniture, acoustic foam on the walls, etc.

    Want to receive the Daily Goody in your email, daily or weekly? Subscribe free here.

    And please keep in mind, the Daily Goody is only a tiny little tip, fact or lesson everyday. Please don’t expect any of these posts to be long, earth-shattering masterpieces that instantly answer every single question you can think of and completely transform you into a world class podcast engineer. “Little by little, a little becomes a lot.”

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