The Studio
A hybrid audio workspace built for careful listening, intentional decisions, and flexible problem-solving.
My studio is built around a hybrid workflow: the flexibility of modern digital tools combined with the focus, feel, and commitment of analog hardware.
I use both because they serve different parts of the process. Digital tools let me work precisely, repair difficult audio, and move quickly when needed. Analog tools slow me down in the best way — they make me listen, choose, and commit.
I love working with gear, but the gear is only there to serve the work.
A good tool can make something clearer, warmer, cleaner, louder, or more controlled. The real skill is knowing what the project actually needs — what to fix, what to enhance, and what to leave alone. That kind of judgment only comes with careful listening, experience, and restraint.
My setup is designed for a wide range of audio work: podcast cleanup, restoration, archival audio, mastering, final polish for self-produced records, or projects that don’t fit neatly into one category.
The heart of the room is a custom hybrid workflow that lets me move between precise digital editing and intentional analog processing — especially when working with stems, buses, old recordings, or music that needs careful finishing rather than a one-size-fits-all chain.
What the studio is designed for
Clarity
Tools that help reveal detail, improve translation, and make the important parts easier to hear.
Character
Analog color, texture, and movement when the recording needs depth, weight, or a more human feel.
Commitment
A workflow that encourages decisions instead of endless second-guessing and circular revisions.
Control
Precise digital editing, restoration, and repair when the job calls for accuracy and restraint.
Selected Tools, Chosen With Intention
The studio combines precise digital tools from iZotope, FabFilter, Steinberg, Sonnox, and other trusted developers with characterful analog hardware from long-standing names like Neve, SSL, API, and Eventide, alongside boutique makers like Hendyamps and Cyclops Audio.
I also keep a collection of synths, samplers, tape machines, pedals, and unusual creative tools — including instruments from Roland, Korg, Akai, Slate + Ash, a cherished Akai MPC 60II, and the Casio SK-1 I’ve owned since childhood.
Some pieces are there for precision, some for character, and some because they help me hear the work from a different angle.
The point is not to use everything. The point is to choose the right tool for the moment.
The studio is built to support the work — not overwhelm it.
Whether your project needs precision, character, repair, or a final push, the goal is always the same: make careful decisions that help the important parts come through and make the path to finished feel clearer.