Sound recording Studio - UK The most critical aspect of producing professional studio sound recordings is the one commonly overlooked technique: ACOUSTICS. Poor sounding studio acoustics can be an issue rather you have a modest home vocal sound booth or world class equipment at your disposal. You must understand how sound interacts with your studio sound recordings or mixing environments. The great thing now and days is that are many inexpensive things you can do to produce great studio audio recordings. Sounds as you well know react to different materials within your vocal sound booth. Since sounds are created by vibrations in the air your studio acoustics should have the correct materials. An example would be your tile bathroom. Tile bathrooms are one of the best environments for singing. Studio sound recording UK is excellent in this environment if you are recording rich vocal tracks, but is less than a perfect environment for other sources. Studio sound recording and mixing in this environment is an absolute no. Now I am not suggesting you do Studio sound recording in your bathroom or build a home recording studio in your bathroom. However every room will offer its own particular acoustic trouble areas. Addressing this issue right off the bat is the best way before starting studio sound recording. Some people will overcompensate if the low bass frequency is being absorbed by the acoustics in the room. This can cause your bass tracks to be too heavy once you listen to them outside of the recording booth. Try to use a bass trap to tame those overwhelming bass frequencies. A sine wave of 4 to 6 kHz is a good way to test the studio sound recording acoustics. Try using a software synthesizer to accomplish this test. The best method is to accurately monitor acoustic design of you room. To this play your sound and turn you head will notice that some sounds disappear in some areas of the recording booth and are louder in other areas. It is a tricky process but it is necessary to having the best studio sound recordings. Many home studio recording engineers do not have the space available, so what you can do is is make use of a commercial or homemade Gobo. What is a Gobo you ask? Well a Gobo is a portable wall that van be placed around instruments, or the all mighty microphone. Gobos will help to contain the sound leakage for your studio sound recording. Make sure your Gobo is 3x3 in size. If you get one to small the low frequencies will work their way around the Gobo and you will have poor studio audio recordings. Using both smooth surface Gobos and padded gobos is a great combination to really tailor your studio sound recordings. For those of us with a low
budget, hanging heavy blankets in a clothesline can do a pretty go job at keeping signals and noise out. Recording guitars, vocals, percussion, or any other sounds that move through the area needs to be isolated. Isolating microphones and instruments is the best way to prevent sound leakage. Try to concentrate all your vocals in a vocal booth. A vocal booth is a small room specifically built for studio sound recording for vocals. Your home recording studio will not have a vocal booth so a good size walk-in closet will work just fine. Clothes in a closet can actually absorb sound reflections. Dead space is ideal artificial treatment during mixing. I will cover mixing in another post so be on the lookout. A tiled bathroom and long microphone cords and head phone can provide some lively studio acoustics that may need no reverberation. It really won't matter because outside interference can be kept to a minimum for great studio sound recording.