How to set up your home studio environment to maximize creativity


Dear Music Maniac,

Setting up a studio enviroment that supports you work flow is very important when trying to create your music. I recently found a article on Bandzoogle blog that I wanted to share with you guys. Now you have a check list of things to consider when creating your studio space

Posted by Adam on Jan 22, 2015 in: Music Career Advice

 

Home Studio: Creativity

If you’re a musician, then you’ve been involved to varying degrees in recording. While many of you have probably been in a pro studio, it’s likely that you’ve dabbled with the idea of doing some recording yourself at home or in your own space - for demos, making beats, or even full fledged recordings.

Recording technology has made huge leaps while dropping in price, but having a creatively inspiring and good sounding environment can provide that extra special ‘something’, and make those long nights seem like an hour or two. Here’s a few helpful methods to get the most out of the space you record in!

 

Listen to the Room

Listen to the room and where you are in it

Remember, sound is simply vibrations moving through air, so the space you’re in and where you happen to be recording or listening can affect the outcome and color of your sound. In any recording, don’t try to ‘soundproof’ your space, but ‘tune’ it by picking the best sounding locations, or using objects and materials to control the vibrations that bounce around the room.

If you can’t afford things like studio traps to tune your room, heavy area carpeting can add some vibe to liven things up, and reduce vibrations, especially on wooden squeaky floors. You can also move it around fairly easily as you need it too - it can give you a little bit more control of the sound and add some visual vibe.

All rooms sound different, so here’s a few really basic points for setting up a space for optimal sound:

1. Avoid windows: Windows provide natural light in an enclosed space, but they also translate sound vibrations very well and let in outside noise. Be aware of this for lower volume sources like vocals - if a truck driving by lands on a perfect take, there’s no software or studio trick on earth that can get rid of it. If windows can’t be avoided, try to find very heavy curtains to pull while recording, they can sometimes help reduce outside noise.  

2. ‘Trap’ bass: Bass frequencies are some of the most important no matter the musical style - they are a big part of the sonic spectrum in tracks, so you want to make sure you’re hearing the low end accurately. Bass LOVES corners - in some cases, if not ‘trapped’ (controlled) it can negatively affect your recording.  

To apply basic trapping, try hanging those heavy carpets in your room corners to ‘round’ them out. Egg cartons won’t ever work - remember the heavier or denser the material to control your sound you can find, the better. On a tight budget? Any local charity store will have decent area rugs and / or heavy curtains, just remember to give them a wash first and add some freaky retro vibes to your digs.

3. X marks the spot: When you’ve ‘trapped’, clap your hands around the room to listen to the room sound. If you like what you hear in a certain spot, record a rough take from that spot to review the sound from another source, then mark it with tape so you remember that exact spot for later.  

I knew an engineer who’d assign a hockey player bobble head toy for each band member - he’d place them in the room exactly where he wanted us to set up and play. Tracking in the right place in a space can help reduce ‘post’ work - EQ, effects etc., so invest some time to get it right before hitting record.

 

Consider Comfort

Consider comfort - it’s a marathon, not a sprint

Working in a great sounding room is critical, but you can do this and be cozy at the same time. The more everyone is comfortable, the easier it will be to pull that all nighter to get the record done.  

1. Chairs: Invest in some quality office chairs with proper lower back and lumbar support. Avoid seats with armrests for guitar / bass / sitar players; high stools are good for singers and horn players.  If you have the means a comfy couch is always good for listening back with the band or letting the bass player nap off the day job, and depending on where you place it, can help deaden the room.

2. Lighting: If you don’t have a lot of light, set the mood with cool lamps, christmas lights from the dollar store, or LEDs. It’s your creative space, so add inspiration around the room - pictures, posters, bobble-heads, candles - whatever makes you relaxed and keeps things fun.

3. Take breaks regularly: Rest your ears - they can get tired, especially when you’re employing critical listening or exposing them to higher volumes. Keep food and beverages handy (try to avoid alcohol until you’re done recording). Keep an electric kettle and tea to rest your singer, and have healthy snacks to keep the energy up for the band.

Remember, if your singers voice box cracks from overuse or everyone is exhausted, there’s no getting blood from a stone - the session is over. Keep your ears, minds and bodies fresh, it’ll be easier to keep perspective, and be creative longer.

 
Know your gear

Know your gear, know your music.

Equipment can be cheap or pricey, but it’s talent and preparation that can really make the difference. Just make sure the performance going ‘to tape’ is the best you can make it.  

1. Test everything before recording: Do really basic test recordings with simple scratch vocals and instrumentation - don’t worry about performance just yet, get the setup right.  Programs like Garageband are excellent as they can give a ’rough sketch’ of your recording-to-be and fill in any gaps like if you don’t have a drummer handy.  It gets you ready for a ‘proper’ take, and can even help you tweak a song or two.  

2. Have plenty of spare cables: If you’re getting ‘snap, crackle and pop’ somewhere, 9 times out of 10, it’s a cable, not expensive hardware, so try changing a patch before kicking your computer. Invest in quality spare cabling and it will make life much easier when recording.

3. Backup programs: Consider having two programs on your computer to track with just in case  - some software is free or really inexpensive (like Audacity, Reaper or Logic), and if you run into trouble with one, you can always the other in a pinch.

4. Read your manuals: Boring I know! But you’ll get the correct information right away from the manufacturer which is the best place for it. Also, consider joining an online forum like gearslutz.com (no, this NOT some creepy musician dating site!). Some of the best musical technicians, producers, engineers and musicians are on this board and most of them are more than happy to help out if you have questions about recording.  

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