why people build studios

  • Thread starter Thread starter dobro
  • Start date Start date

why build a studio?

  • For homerecording excellence. My next album's gonna kick ass all around the block.

    Votes: 344 74.5%
  • For commercial purposes. My studio's gonna draw more custom than Abbey Road.

    Votes: 58 12.6%
  • I just wanna build the best studio in the world. I started off in music, but I got sidetracked. No

    Votes: 60 13.0%

  • Total voters
    462
Hmmmmmmmmm, I posted this last reply a couple of weeks ago. I wonder why this is coming to the top of the list now? :confused: Something wrong with the server files or what?
 
fitZ2 said:
Hmmmmmmmmm, I posted this last reply a couple of weeks ago. I wonder why this is coming to the top of the list now? :confused: Something wrong with the server files or what?

I think it's when someone votes (and don't leave a message), it is a bit disturbing.
 
Beltrom said:
I think it's when someone votes (and don't leave a message), it is a bit disturbing.

:o .....That's EXACTLY what I was gonna do..........is that rude? :o

( sheepishly goes to his room...)
 
couple of reasons for me...

1: I write songs and i want a career in music. Cant afford to keep popping to a studio to lay down tracks, my stuff takes time to evolve into a finished piece from the original concept. If im not happy at the end of the day at the studio i come away 'X' amount of bucks down with a CD im not happy with...

2: So I build a studio - im a perfectionist so I want to eventually build a kick ass studio thats gonna produce some clean well produced sounds for my songs. Like your kids, you want the best for them even if all they will amount to is being thrown in the bin in a A & R office! ( I suppose the ultimate goal for my studio is consumer CD quality although I know that is achieved only with a real studio - but i want to be as close as possible).

3: Also its in my nature - I love a project to keep me from falling into the go to work - come home - get drunk - moan about life - go to bed and wake up with a hangover routine. 15 years ago i was building tree houses and making them as solid and as cool as possible with my buddies around the street. Or building rafts (which always sank). I just love constructing things and having (mental) distractions from working the 9 - 5.

So thats why I invest so much time/money in my studio...
 
Well I am starting because I am easily getting my name out now for my recording (funny part the first ones were desktop mics that is why i am getting hired for jobs). The people rather record with me with minimul gear then record with some guys that have a studio cause my quality is better.
 
Lately I've started to think that maybe I'm building a studio because it's easier and more immediately gratifiying than writing and recording music. That's really sad, isn't it.

(Somebody hold me.)
 
It is gratifying, but once done, you can get back to what you started it for in the first place. Actually, my studio has been moved 5 times, so I think I've spent more time on it than music in the last 5 years. Oh well. Thats life for ya.
Get happiness where you find it.
fitZ
 
I built my first studio in 1995 because I was tired of a recurring situation. I'm a guitar teacher and it's typical of prospective students to want to hear a teacher play before enrolling in lessons. Don't know why but I've always found that irritating. Guess it's because I think, beyond a certain point, playing skill is somewhat unrelated to teaching skill. I decided to make a solo gtr CD so hopefully prospective students would just say, "heard you play and want to find out about your teaching program". So I got some gear, recorded off and on for a couple months, took it to an engineer to do a few edits and add some reverb (I just had mic's, mixer and a DAT machine) and had the CD made. Turned out to be very useful for my intended purpose and other things too - like airplay and concert promotion. Since then my recording studio's grown a lot and now with web-based music the situation's better still for getting your music heard.

Tim
 
RICK FITZPATRICK said:
It is gratifying, but once done, you can get back to what you started it for in the first place. Actually, my studio has been moved 5 times, so I think I've spent more time on it than music in the last 5 years. Oh well. Thats life for ya.
Get happiness where you find it.
fitZ

I feel for ya. I just finished 3 years of studio upgrades and now I've decided to move.

The good news is I'll have a REAL studio space in the new house, probably 14' x 18' or so :D It'll sure beat the 8.5' x 11' I have now :eek:
 
The good news is I'll have a REAL studio space in the new house, probably 14' x 18' or so It'll sure beat the 8.5' x 11' I have now

Congradulations MS!! Wow, that is the exact size of my room. Its perfect for my needs. Although I do have a 30" deep closet the width of the room at the rear wall too. Perfect for a bass trap. Now all I need is the Rockwool. I'm not even isolating it. I live up on a hilltop in the country and its real quiet. Good luck with yours and don't let the move get ya down. Mine about killed me. :eek: :rolleyes: They'll have to pat my face with a shovel before I'll ever move again. :p
fitZ
 
I started out playing guitar wanting to badly record my sketch ideas. After a couple per/hr studio experiences and $3000 spent on a finished product that was just "alright". That didn't cut it for me, they always said the more experience infront of the mic the better. Well, why not apply that in the studio?
Now that I've been obsessed with recording for about 7yrs, I want to record some fantastic creative sounding albums. With all the heart I pour into my basement studio and collection of guerilla tactics I owe it to myself to justify it all by showing everyone I can do something amazing with all this junk!

Which I'm sure if it all works it will lead to work with other artists.

The key is, I play original music in a band that doesn't make much money, so if we can pour our money into gear that we can use year after year we're making the most of it.
 
Why I'm building mine

I have played music for years, drums in musical theater mostly, but lots of club dates in jazz and rock as well. I come up with catchy songs every day as I go through the chores, mowing, washing dishes, anything where my mind is free to wander... so I would like to have an easy way to get some songs down in a fine form.

After 20 years of playing the same old kit, I got a new one, and somehow got bitten with the gear bug. My bedroom now looks like the percussion room at Guitar Center. A couple of years ago a buddy died and I bought his multitracker mostly out of wanting to help out his wife with the bills.

It just so happens that I live out in the country and have a shop built on a concrete slab. I just started framing it in and reading about studio construction. I figure it will be a fun pad to play, record, hang out. Lots of my friends play and instead of hanging out in the living room drinking I would just as soon go to the music room and get creative.

I also have designs on training my 11 year old son into engineering and he already plays guitar and piano. My 6 year old daughter sings with beautiful clear tone and perfect pitch. A family art is falling into place.

I got some carpal tunnel after framing last summer and had to stop the project. But now I am using a nail gun and am back on the pace. Framing is almost done and I just wired in a new 100 amp panel. THis is going to be the summer. By next fall I will have reclaimed my bedroom. No conga burns or timbale fractures :-)
 
i just want to record an album of my own one day. now if only i could come up with an album's worth of good songs...
 
I now see it's all been a prelude.......

Building a suitable nesting place for a Minimoog Voyager Electric Blue and all the outboard goodies that go with it.

By the end of July it should be looking like Mission Control in my living room.:cool:
 
the thing with rap is that i can jsut get in the booth whenever i feel like freestyling.... i dont have to think out a song or anything all i have to do is step in the booth... anytime of the day... anytime in the next 10 years..... its all set up for me... i dont have to leave home.. the love of music is why you do it... not because your making 1 record!! :mad:
 
Well,


I built my place in 1988 when I was 20. My parents let my brother and I close in their garage. They said," If you pay for it, you can do whatever you want out there." We built several layers of walls until they were 12" Thick. That allowed me to basically play drums anytime I wanted. I had a little 8-track reel-to-reel studio (a Kelsey 24x4 mixer modified to be a pair of 12x4's in the same frame, with a Fostex A4. Whew- I thought I was bigtime when I got that set up!)

It was great to have. My friends and I spent untold hours playing out there.

Locally, studio time is expensive, and any place to rent to practice is roughly $500 a month. If you are willing to be locked into paying $250 a month for a long time, you can build quite a decent studio.

Or spend 5 hours a month in a commercial studio.

So, for me - it served 2 purposes.

I have yet to actually "release" anything. I can never seem to get the bands past the garage stage. I have a hard time finding musicians who don't drink like fish, or think Pot is one of the "5 basic food groups".

But I have recorded several 7" singles for others that have been released (One of them sold 3,000 copies the first week!)

And I've recorded a Jazz CD for my brothers band, that is sitting on the shelf...I'm still not sure why they canned it. I know the label owner and my brother had some words at one point, and that's my guess.

Anyway, I did it because I liked being able to have my own place to work on stuff, and to be able to tinked and play around with sound.

I had worked in several diferent construction trades, so actually building it didn't take very long. My whole band was made up of carpenters, and sheetrock/painters, so once we had all the supplies delivered - we would work on it at night. We set the walls in one weekend, ran electric in one night, insulation and sheetrock took two more nights, and then it was just a matter of mudding the sheetrock, sanding, and then priming, painting, and we hung carpet tiles on the walls (18"x24" doormats made form carpet.... you know, those samples that the carpet places have.)

It looks cool, and the sound is great.

But sadly, I had to give it up because we took in a friend who has lupus and her family wouldn't help her.
So it came down to - do I let her wind up homeless, or do I keep playing drums?
So to make room for her, my brother moved into the studio, and she moved into his room.
Obviously, my conscience (no matter what anyone thinks of me) wouldn't allow me to let my friend die as a homeless person on the street - even when her own family would.

So, I gave up the studio. At times it's been hard because it set me back musically, but I'm working on a new gameplan that is going to allow me to purchase my own place, and build a studio there.

And this one is goingto be bigger, and better - and actually have a bathroom and kitchenette in it! No more traipsing through the house to go to the bathroom, or to make some coffee. :D


Tim
 
cellardweller said:
How unfortunate that I should personally know one of the 12% who have "fallen through the cracks".

I concede the point that Social Security, Medi-care, and medic-aid are insufficient.

If you are sick and arrive at the hospital you will receive "care", but not the same care that one with insurance receives. I've been on both sides of this one personally. Even small children are shooed off and many times released before an accurate diagnosis is made, let alone a treatment found.

I am thankful to be able to provide health/dental insurance for my family, but I have seen the misery of those who are unable to do so, VERY close up.

and I am through!

I'm with you on this. I have a friend who has Lupus and all sorts of problems (she has been diagnose with 39 things wrong with her - each of the qualifies her as "disabled" for Social Security and Medicaid/Medicare), and she has no one to help her, so my family took her in, and she's trying to get on SSD/SSI.
But because she is 37, the government doesn't want to help her. She was turned down, and is now appealing it.

I mean - she went from being a very vibrant, active and happy person, to where she now she has to almost live in a recliner because if she doesn't, her feet and lower legs swell up like basketballs. She gets some medical help from the local hospital, but what they do is too little, and the visits are too far between, on top of that - they don't give a damn, and they are rude to her.
So, I've had to go to the hospital to make sure that they are nice to her, and to make sure that they have "another voice" to listen to.
(I'm fairly certain that the fact that I'm a 6'2", 260 Lb man with tattoo's,long hair, and a long beard - looking much like your average hell's angel - doesn't hurt any in this instance. :D)

I used to be completely against Socialized medicine, but these days - having experienced the system through observing what it does for my Roommate -I think we definitely need a system that helps poor people - no questions asked.


Oh, and to get back on track - I can't wait to be able to build my next home studio. :D



Tim
 
Last edited:
Tim Brown said:
I can never seem to get the bands past the garage stage. I have a hard time finding musicians who don't drink like fish, or think Pot is one of the "5 basic food groups".

Tim



...I hear you brother!
 
i want a home studio, simply so i can roll out of bed and make beats while eating Applejacks in my boxer-shorts.
 
ME!?!?! lol j/k.... I agree though... I just get out of bed at like 2AM if I have an idea lmao...
 
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