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START HERE: Welcome to Room to Record
This community is for people building creative spaces they can actually use. That might be: • a full home studio • a desk in the corner of a room • a laptop and headphones • a rehearsal room • or complete organised creative chaos The goal here isn’t perfection. It’s building a space, workflow, and mindset that helps you keep making things over time. We’ll be talking about: • studio setups • workflow • creativity • procrastination • recording • songwriting • gear • clutter • distractions, and • the strange process of trying to make meaningful things while still living a normal adult life. Feel free to introduce yourself, share your setup, your goals, your music, or just quietly absorb ideas while pretending you’re “still planning things.” Very common here. What are you currently trying to plan, build or create?
START HERE: Welcome to Room to Record
The content slowly starts connecting...
One unexpected thing about building Room to Record is realising that the content slowly starts connecting together. What began as a simple 10-part series about building the studio is now turning into a proper downloadable guide combining: • the original posts; • studio photos; • layouts and planning; • workflow ideas; • reflections; • creative psychology, and; • all the strange little lessons that happen while trying to build a space you can actually use consistently. Originally I thought it would just be a small PDF bonus for the group. Instead, it’s slowly becoming: • a guide; • a visual diary; • a studio philosophy document, and; • the foundation for future classroom and video content. Which is apparently how creative projects work. You start trying to improve one room and accidentally build an entire ecosystem around it. Here are a couple of early preview pages from the document so far.
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The content slowly starts connecting...
Building a Model Studio – When it’s time to Lego
Sometimes you need to physically see the room before you fully understand it… I recently took my 6-year-old son to our local library where, alongside books and video games, they have a huge table full of LEGO. Usually I spend the time looking through the vinyl LPs or involuntarily colour-coding all the LEGO pieces like some kind of mildly broken designer goblin. But this time, without really thinking about it, I started building a model of the studio. At first it seemed silly. Then I realised it’s basically the same process. Moving furniture around. Testing layouts.Working out where things fit. Once Freddy finished making his amazing “super transparent car,” he realised what I was doing and immediately joined in. “We need the yellow carpet, Dad…” And suddenly we were thinking about workflow, movement, storage, sound, lighting and comfort. A lot of home studio advice online jumps straight to expensive gear, but the actual room matters more than people admit. The shape of the space. The listening position. Where cables collect. Where instruments end up. Where clutter starts. Whether the room actually makes you want to create. Sometimes creativity starts with experimentation that looks a bit ridiculous from the outside. Sketches. Tape on floors. Cardboard mockups. Why not LEGO? Tiny desks made from random bricks, while your kid explains why the dragon needs laser cannons. This process matters. Because eventually the room stops being an abstract idea and starts becoming a real creative environment built around how you actually live and work. And honestly, building creative spaces while raising kids probably deserves its own category entirely. There’s also something strangely appropriate about designing a creative space using the same kind of building process most of us grew up with in the first place. Tiny pieces. Gradual experimentation. Changing the plan halfway through. Making a mess. Rebuilding sections repeatedly until they finally feel right. Which, honestly, describes most home studios pretty accurately.
Building a Model Studio – When it’s time to Lego
The Second Track from the Room...
One of the unexpected things about building a home studio is that eventually it stops being about the room itself and starts becoming part of an ongoing creative process. After weeks of rearranging gear, testing setups, recording demos, changing layouts, fixing cables, and slowly turning the space into something functional, the room started to generate a steady stream of actual output. This is “Your Ugly Mug” — written by Tom Smith, and recorded as part of the ongoing collaboration between Baulk at the Möön and The Songs of Tom Smith. https://open.spotify.com/track/3cJ3ym6XEY1pSz67NqwskF?si=c392d02c17734b3b One thing I’ve realised through this process is that creativity rarely arrives under perfect conditions. Most songs happen somewhere between chaos, experimentation, self-doubt, technical problems, unfinished ideas, and the strange decision to keep going anyway. That’s probably what Room to Record is really about. Not perfection. Not expensive gear. Not waiting until everything is “ready”. Just building enough space — mentally and physically — for the work to keep happening. @roomtorecord #HomeStudio #Songwriting #RecordingStudio @baulkatthemoon @songs_of_tom_smith #MusicProduction
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The Second Track from the Room...
The Room Finally Started Making Music
After spending weeks building, adjusting, reorganising, painting, tweaking, and slowly turning this space into something usable… eventually you have to stop working on the room and actually use it. That’s the part people don’t talk about enough. A home studio can quietly become a permanent setup project. There’s always another thing to improve. Another cable to fix. Another plugin to buy. Another video to watch. At some point though, the room has to justify its existence. So here is the first recording that came from the room finally becoming a place for actual output instead of endless preparation. “Dealing Drugs” was written by Tom Smith and recorded in the new home studio to meet an external deadline. It was later mixed and mastered at Hillside Studios by Matt Hills, before being released in January 2026 on The Glorious Rebirth… by Baulk at the Möön (more on that in a future post). https://open.spotify.com/track/33bw4zPtGm4KeMmwkbIczF?si=40edcd543fb14bf9 Tom’s original demo was a raw acoustic guitar-and-vocal recording captured on a mobile phone. It's also part of his forthcoming concept album about crime and justice. I approached the arrangement as a strange fusion of 90s grunge and hip-hop, which was completely new territory for me, and asked my friend Adam Szkolka to record the main vocals.
The Room Finally Started Making Music
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