Rock Star Refuses More Than Two Vocal Takes: 'After Four, You're Lying'
- - Rock Star Refuses More Than Two Vocal Takes: 'After Four, You're Lying'
Lauren AndersonJanuary 15, 2026 at 7:32 PM
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Mariano Regidor/Redferns
Yungblud has a hard rule in the studio: he only records his vocals twice.
"I donāt do overdubs for f--king 10 takes," the 28-year-old rock star told Rolling Stone.
"I sing it twice and I put it together. Thatās what I do. I get in and I sing it twice and then goodnight."
In an industry where artists often chase the "perfect" take through endless retakes and digital polish, Yungbludās approach is almost radical. For him, emotion has an expiration date.
"Thereās a moment when youāve written it and you get in the boothāthereās a fear, there is the weight of the world, the whole universe looking at you when you f--king stare into that microphone,ā he explained. āAnd after four takes, youāre lying."
That philosophy also shapes how he thinks about one of musicās most misunderstood tools: Auto-Tune.
Despite being a proven vocalist, Yungblud, born Dominic Harrison, still faces criticism from listeners who assume he relies on digital tricks to carry his voice. He says that couldnāt be further from the truth.
"Let me tell you about Auto-Tune," he said. "You get out what you put in. If you canāt f--king sing, you sound like s--t."
Yungblud admitted heāll sometimes use Auto-Tune, but only when it serves the song. For him, itās not a crutch, but an effect no different than distortion on a guitar or reverb on a drum.
"Itās all about...how the vocal will rub with the f--king violin line," he said. "When I shut my eyes and it doesnāt irk me, itās ready to come out. If it irks me, itās not ready."
At the core of it all is his belief that music should feel true, not perfect. The nerves in a first take, the cracks in a voice, the rawness of the moment. For Yungblud, thatās where the magic lives. Once thatās gone, he believes, no amount of studio wizardry can bring it back.
This story was originally published by Parade on Jan 15, 2026, where it first appeared in the News section. Add Parade as a Preferred Source by clicking here.
Source: āAOL Entertainmentā