The studio for recording real instruments and vocals. A bigger 8-in interface, a pair of pro mics (condenser plus dynamic), a 49-key controller, 8-inch monitors with a sub, an acoustic treatment kit, and a boom stand with pop filter. Capture, mix, release.
Plans
Choose a plan that fits your needs and budget
Item List
7Interface & Control
2 itemsMonitoring & Room
2 itemsAccessories
1 items| Item | Category | Specs | Qty | Price | Link |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Desk Accessories | TypeBoom FilterYes BaseWeighted | 1 | $60 | View Shop |
Mics
2 itemsInterface & Control
2Accessories
1FAQ
Common questions about this kit
Eight inputs — overkill?
For drums or a full band, no. Eight inputs capture a drum kit or two mics per source at once. For solo vocal-and-guitar, a 2-in is enough — but you will grow into 8.
Condenser plus dynamic?
Yes. The condenser captures detail and room (vocals, acoustic guitar); the dynamic handles loud sources and rejects bleed (amps, snare, loud vocals). You need both.
A subwoofer in a home studio?
Only with treatment. A sub reveals the low end you cannot hear on small monitors — but it also excites your room. Treat first, sub second.
Acoustic treatment — necessary?
Yes. Bare walls create reflections that lie to you about your mix. Panels at first-reflection points and bass traps in corners are the difference between a mix that translates and one that does not.
User Reviews
Home recording studio treats the room like I treat my espresso puck prep — acoustic treatment is non-negotiable. Subwoofer-after-treatment is the pro call.