About Us
Last updated: June 29, 2026
About Wizardium
Wizardium is an English-language publication dedicated entirely to the craft and science of audio production. We exist for one reason: to help you make better-sounding recordings, mixes, and masters — without the fluff, without the dogma, and without wasting your time on techniques that don’t translate to real-world results.
Whether you are a home-studio producer, a live sound engineer, a podcast editor, or a musician who finally decided to understand compression, Wizardium is built for you. We cut through marketing hype and focus on what actually works: signal flow, gain staging, frequency balance, dynamic control, and the listening skills that separate good mixes from great ones.
Who This Site Is For
- Home-studio enthusiasts who want professional results without a million-dollar console.
- Content creators and podcasters who need clean, intelligible audio — fast.
- Live sound technicians looking for practical troubleshooting and system tuning advice.
- Music producers (any genre) who want to stop fighting their room and start making decisions.
- Students and self-taught engineers who want a reliable, no-nonsense reference.
Topics We Cover
Our editorial scope is focused and practical. You will find articles on:
- Recording techniques (microphone placement, preamp gain, phase alignment)
- Mixing fundamentals (EQ, compression, reverb, panning, automation)
- Mastering for streaming vs. vinyl vs. broadcast
- Studio acoustics and monitoring (without selling you foam panels you don’t need)
- Common mistakes (and how to fix them) in every stage of production
- Gear reviews that focus on utility, not affiliate commissions
- Workflow and session organization for DAWs (Pro Tools, Logic, Ableton, Reaper)
Our Editorial Standards
Wizardium is a content blog, not a marketing brochure. Every article is written with the reader’s problem in mind: “I have this issue — what’s the fastest, most reliable way to solve it?” We frame content around common pitfalls and the steps to avoid them, because we believe that knowing what not to do is often more valuable than a list of abstract tips.
- We verify facts. Technical claims are cross-checked against manufacturer documentation, AES papers, and hands-on testing. If we recommend a technique, we have used it ourselves.
- We update when practices change. Audio technology evolves — new DAW versions, plugin architectures, loudness standards. We review and revise older posts to keep them current.
- We cite sources. Whenever we reference a specific standard (e.g., LUFS, AES67, sample rate conversion) or a piece of gear, we link to the original documentation or a reputable third-party test.
- We correct errors. If you spot a mistake, email us. We will investigate and issue a correction with full transparency.
Contact
Email: [email protected]
Postal address: 1193 Oak Ave, Unknown, New Jersey 61882
We welcome questions, corrections, and topic suggestions. Please note that we do not offer one-on-one consulting or mix critiques via email — but we do read every message and often turn reader questions into future articles.
Last updated: June 2026