Ep 49 - Serve The Song: Cutting Parts Without Crushing Egos

Ep 49 - Serve The Song: Cutting Parts Without Crushing Egos

Two listener questions, two real studio problems this week. First up, what happens when a mix has too many great ideas competing for the same space, and how do you tell someone their part has to go without bruising their ego? Then we get into toms, arguably the hardest drum element to get right, and walk through our full process for cleaning, tuning, and sampling them until they sit huge in the mix.

We're talking arrangement, ego management, and the honest truth about how many "real" tom sounds you hear on records are actually sample-blended. Spoiler: probably all of them.

You'll Learn:

  • Why "serving the song" beats serving your own favorite part, every time
  • How to mute and A/B parts so the band hears the decision instead of just being told
  • Our go-to approach for gating and cleaning tom bleed before anything else happens
  • When and why we blend in samples, and why that's not cheating
  • How to keep consistency across tom hits using volume automation instead of relying on inconsistent playing

Topics & Stories:

  • The mid-recording camera mishap that kicked off this episode
  • Why removing a part doesn't mean it was a bad idea
  • The "help me help you" mindset for dealing with band egos
  • Firing yourself as a drummer to serve the song
  • The Black Salt Audio Silencer plugin and why it changed the tom game
  • Why reverb, compression, and sampled drums are all just tone shaping, not cheating

Listener Q&A:
This week's questions came from two YouTube commenters. One asked how to know which parts to cut when a mix feels too dense, and how to deliver that news to a bandmate without the drama. The other asked for help getting toms to sound big and clear when everything else in the mix is dialed in.

👉 Got a question for us?
đź“© Submit it here: Form Link
We pull topics directly from your questions and YouTube comments.

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.