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UAD Sound City Studios Review — How This Plugin Fixed My "Disconnected" Home-Recorded Guitar


"My home-recorded guitar always sounds disconnected from the mix."

That was a problem I dealt with for a long time.

The tone itself wasn't bad.
But next to real drums and bass, my guitar always sounded like it was recorded in a different room.

ryo
ryo
I own TONEX MAX and AmpliTube 5. Both sound great on their own. But somehow they never felt like they were breathing the same air as the rest of the track.
I know that feeling. The tone is fine, but it just doesn't sit in the band.
読者
読者

One plugin fixed that "disconnected" feeling almost instantly: UAD Sound City Studios.

I've been playing guitar for 13 years and producing music at home for 5. In this review, I'll share my honest, long-term experience with this plugin.

For context, my own taste leans toward 90s alternative, shoegaze, and grunge.

Who this review is for

  • Your home-recorded guitar sounds disconnected from the rest of the mix
  • You want more room ambience and "air" on your home-recorded guitar
  • You're deciding whether UAD Sound City Studios is worth buying

What Is UAD Sound City Studios?

UAD Sound City Studios is a plugin made by Universal Audio (UA).

It models the entire sound of Sound City Studios, the legendary recording studio in Van Nuys, California.

Sound City is where Nirvana recorded Nevermind (1991), along with Fleetwood Mac, Tom Petty, and many other rock landmarks.

The studio is especially famous for its drum sound.

But this plugin isn't limited to drums.
It can place guitars, vocals, bass, and full ensembles into that same room.

Legendary Bands and Artists Recorded at Sound City

The fastest way to understand why this studio matters is to look at who recorded there.

  • Nirvana – Nevermind (1991)
  • Fleetwood Mac (their 1975 self-titled album, plus parts of Rumours)
  • Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers – Damn the Torpedoes
  • Neil Young – After the Gold Rush
  • Rage Against the Machine
  • Red Hot Chili Peppers
  • Metallica
  • Tool
  • Nine Inch Nails
  • Weezer
  • Johnny Cash
  • Slayer
  • Guns N' Roses

Alternative, grunge, hard rock, metal — some of rock's most important records were born here.

Check the current price on Plugin Boutique

ryo
ryo
Personally, the fact that Nirvana's Nevermind was recorded here is what does it for me. That drum sound is Sound City itself.
As a Nirvana fan, just knowing that gets me excited.
読者
読者
ryo
ryo
Exactly. Just knowing I can add that same air from Nevermind into my own home recordings makes this fun on its own.

Using It as a Re-Mic Plugin

In short, this plugin is a Re-Mic plugin.

It takes a sound you've already recorded (or programmed) and makes it sound like it was re-recorded through Sound City's rooms and microphones.

That means the workflow is simple.
You just drop it in after a plugin like TONEX.

ryo
ryo
It's not shaping the tone itself — it's adding the room and air that tone is played in.

My Honest Impression: The "Disconnected" Guitar Problem Actually Disappeared

The first thing that surprised me was how quickly my original problem was solved.

I applied Sound City's Re-Mic mode lightly on top of a TONEX MAX guitar tone.
That alone made the guitar sound like it was sitting in the same room as the drums.

What actually changed — was it EQ, or reverb?
読者
読者
ryo
ryo
It felt like the "room air" became shared. Instruments that used to feel scattered settled into one space.

Part of why I like TONEX MAX in the first place is its sense of "air." Sound City took that a step further.

[Comparison Video] Plugin OFF vs. ON (Guitar)

I made a comparison video for guitar as well.

You can hear the same phrase with the plugin OFF, then ON.

The preset used is "Attitude Cab V - Gobos." Listen for how much depth and cabinet-style ambience it adds.

ryo
ryo
The moment you switch it on, you can hear the flat guitar tone turn into something that sounds like it's playing inside a room.

Where Should You Place It in the Chain?

People often ask, "Should a re-mic plugin go first in the chain?"

But placing it before your tone-shaping plugin is a mistake.

Re-Mic re-records a sound that's already finished.
So it belongs after you've already shaped the tone.

So for guitar, that means after TONEX?
読者
読者
ryo
ryo
Exactly. Shape the tone with TONEX first, then put Sound City after it. Reverse the order and you end up putting room ambience on a raw DI signal that hasn't even gone through an amp yet.

Basic Placement Rules

  • Guitar: place after your amp sim (e.g. TONEX) has already shaped the tone
  • Drums: apply to the stereo drum bus
  • For subtle blending: put it on an aux/bus and mix it lightly under the dry signal

UA's official manual describes both approaches: inserting directly on a track, or applying it to a bus that combines multiple tracks.

In my experience, using it on a bus and blending it lightly was the easiest way to work with it.

Rather than replacing your sound entirely with Sound City, think of it as adding a layer of room air underneath your original tone. That's what tends to work best for home recording.

Dynamic Room Modeling Is the Core Technology

The heart of this plugin is Dynamic Room Modeling.

It models the room, microphones, console, and outboard gear together as one system.

One especially interesting feature: you can drag the microphone position.
Moving the mic closer or farther from the source changes how the room responds in real time.

Included Microphones

The plugin includes modeled condenser and ribbon mics from brands like AKG, Neumann, and RCA. Each source can use one close mic plus two room mics.

Two Modes You Can Switch Between

There are broadly two modes.

  1. Re-Mic mode: replaces your recorded sound with one that sounds re-recorded at Sound City
  2. Reverb mode: adds Sound City's ambience as a blend on top of your existing sound

For guitar, I mostly use Re-Mic lightly on a bus.

Push it too hard and it adds too much character. I found keeping the Mix knob around 20–40% worked well for home recording.

Not Just Guitar — I Tried It on Every Part

I originally bought this plugin for guitar.

But over time, I started reaching for it on vocals, bass, and drums too.

ryo
ryo
In the end, putting every part of the band in the same room is what pulls the whole mix together.
Part Impression
Drums The biggest change. Even programmed drums gain a natural, live feel
Vocals Adds distance and shine, helps them sit in the track
Bass Low end finds its "place" and the core of the sound comes forward
Guitar Disconnected feeling disappears and it locks into the mix (as above)

The Biggest Change Was on Drums

Honestly, drums surprised me the most.

I program a lot of drums with MODO DRUM and BFD3, and programmed drums tend to sound dry and mechanically "lined up."

Running them through Sound City's Re-Mic instantly adds the kind of ambience you'd get from a live studio recording.

So even programmed drums start to sound like real drums?
読者
読者
ryo
ryo
I wouldn't call it "real drums," exactly, but a flat sound gains depth and room ambience. The way the attack bounces back changes too.

Since Sound City is famous specifically for its drum sound, it makes sense that this is where the character comes through the strongest.

Getting Closer to a Dave Grohl-Style Drum Sound

This part will land hardest if you're a Nirvana fan.

The massive drum sound on Nevermind was recorded in exactly this Studio A room.

ryo
ryo
That thick, raw drum ambience Dave Grohl gets — being able to bring my own home recordings closer to that is what makes this so exciting.

Of course, playing style and the drum kit itself are different, so it won't sound identical.

But you can bring that Nevermind room sound into your own programmed drums.
That alone makes grunge and alternative home recordings feel a lot more authentic.

Dave Grohl reportedly loved this studio so much that when it closed, he bought the console and moved it to his own Studio 606. That's how unique this room's sound was.

If it gets me even a little closer to that sound, it's worth using for that alone.
読者
読者

[Comparison Video] With and Without the Plugin (Drums)

Words alone don't really do this justice, so I made a comparison video.

Using the same drum material, you can hear it without Sound City, then with it applied.

The preset used is "Dead Kick Fixer." Listen for how a buried kick drum comes forward after it's applied (in Logic Pro).

What to Listen For

Compare the buried kick before and after Dead Kick Fixer. Also listen for how much depth the whole kit gains, and whether you can hear that Dave Grohl-style room sound coming through.

Where It Shines for Alternative, Grunge, and Shoegaze Home Recording

My own taste runs toward 90s alternative, shoegaze, and grunge, so I like building a "wall" of guitar in my home recordings.

Sound City turned out to work really well for this kind of tone.

ryo
ryo
When I put both doubled guitar tracks into the same room, the left and right sides stop feeling separate and turn into one solid wall of sound.

For this kind of sound, it matters a lot when instruments blend together into one image instead of staying separate.
That shared sense of "playing in the same room" helped a lot here.

It also makes sense given Sound City's history — this is the studio behind Nirvana and other alternative/grunge landmark albums.
The genre fit is no accident.

Built-In EQ, Compressor, and Chamber Reverb Are Also Useful

The plugin also includes a 3-band EQ and compressor modeled on Sound City's console.

On top of that, it includes a 1176-style compressor and the studio's own echo chamber.

In other words, a lot of your tonal shaping can be done with this one plugin.

You can also turn off the room modeling entirely and use it purely as an EQ / compressor / chamber multi-effect.

Downsides and Things to Check Before Buying

Only writing positives wouldn't be honest, so here are the real downsides too.

1. It Does Not Work in GarageBand

This is important.

UAD Sound City Studios does not run in GarageBand.

Compatibility Note

Supported on macOS 11+ and Windows 10/11, in VST3, AU, and AAX formats. If you're on GarageBand, consider moving to Logic Pro first.

I use Logic Pro so this isn't an issue for me, but it's worth checking if you're coming from GarageBand.

2. Requires an iLok Account

Authentication requires an iLok account.

You can authorize it with either iLok Cloud or a USB dongle.
It's free to set up, but it can be a bit confusing the first time.

3. CPU Load Is on the Heavier Side

This plugin uses a fair amount of CPU.

Rather than inserting it on every track, it's more realistic to use one instance on a bus.

Can you turn off the EQ or compressor if you're not using them?
読者
読者
ryo
ryo
Yes. All three effects can be switched off individually, which saves CPU.

4. UAD Native Support Means You Don't Need UA Hardware

This one's good news.

Unlike older UAD plugins, this one runs without any UA hardware (UAD Native).
It works as a standalone plugin on both Mac and Windows.

Who Might Not Need This Plugin

Honestly, this isn't a must-have for everyone.

  • You mostly record solo acoustic guitar performances
  • You're already satisfied with the room-ambience plugins you have
  • You have no plans to move off GarageBand

If any of these apply to you, there's no need to force the purchase.

On the other hand, if you're trying to make a home-recorded band sound feel unified, this plugin is likely to hit hard.

Pricing and Sales

The regular price is $349, but it drops significantly during sales.

It has previously dropped as low as $39 (84% off). Around Black Friday is typically the best time to watch for a deal.

Paying full price feels like a waste, so waiting for a sale is the smart move.

Always check the official product page or retailer for the latest pricing before you buy.

See UAD Sound City Studios on Plugin Boutique

Conclusion: A Plugin That Fixes That "Disconnected" Home-Recorded Guitar Feeling

Key Takeaways

  • UAD Sound City Studios is a Re-Mic plugin that adds room and air to a sound
  • Placing it after a plugin like TONEX removes that "disconnected" guitar feeling
  • It works on vocals, bass, and drums too, not just guitar — drums see the biggest change
  • It can bring programmed drums closer to a Dave Grohl / Nevermind-style room sound
  • The draggable-mic Dynamic Room Modeling is the core feature
  • Watch out for no GarageBand support, the iLok requirement, and moderate CPU load
  • It drops significantly during sales, so buying at full price isn't recommended

For me, this plugin solved a problem I'd had for years: a good-sounding guitar that never quite fit the song.

ryo
ryo
As that final push after you've already dialed in your tone, it's incredibly reliable.

If you're dealing with that same "disconnected" feeling, it's worth trying during a sale.

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