After three months of construction, the brand new WBRS recording studio has opened. The project — a separate entity from the WBRS station — began earlier this semester.

The project focused largely on a live engineering studio — used for professional music recording — which included an upgrade to a thirty-two channel audio mixer.

WBRS is also considering opening the studio as a paid professional studio to artists outside the Brandeis community, according to Isaac Zukin ’19, the WBRS music director.

On Saturday from noon to 2 p.m., Jordan Mudd ’20 and Ryan Gebhardt ’17 both recorded music with the new setup.

—Junsheng He

—Editor’s note: an earlier version of this article contained multiple factual inaccuracies, listed below. Additionally, the Justice reporter did not adhere to the Justice’s standards for ethical and accurate reporting, including standard practices for interviewing subjects, such as identifying oneself as a journalist. Specifically, all quotes that appeared in the original version were not accurate, direct quotations. Rather, the reporter attributed paraphrases — some containing false statements — to the WBRS staff members that he spoke with in the studio. To amend these errors, the original News brief has been rewritten, the quotes have been removed and this list of corrections will appear in our May 2 print issue. The Justice remains dedicated to ethical and accurate reporting, and we will review newspaper policies and reporting practices with our staff accordingly.

A previous version of this article falsely stated that the WBRS recording studio was part of the WBRS station; they are separate entities. The article also falsely stated that the WBRS station was down during construction of the new studio. This previous version stated that the project was a renovation of an existing entity; however, the recording studio is a new addition to WBRS. The article stated that Ryan Gebhardt ’17 is a sophomore and that he was playing bass guitar. He is actually a senior, and he was not playing bass guitar. The article mistakenly referred to the studio equipment as “appliances,” and also misquoted Isaac Zukin ’19 as speaking about expanding the WBRS station. Zukin was actually speaking about opening the studio as a paid professional studio for artists outside the Brandeis community.