The rise of the home studio
Posted: Apr 14, 2026 3:53 am
Thought this would be a fun thread.
My musical journey started in the 1980s, just when home studios were a thing. In just a few short years it was a total revolution - home studios became ubiquitous and eventually good. I'll never forget reading an article in Sound On Sound, must have been mid to late 80s, where a studio engineer was saying they were toys and no-one was ever going to have a hit with one.
I think we all share a bit of sadness at the demise of the proper recording studio.
The Fostex A8 (and its sequels) were everywhere for a while, then it was those ADAT things. If you didn't have the budget for that, a portastudio of some kind. I ended up with a weird 6 track cassette thing that ran at double speed, a Sansui, running timecode on one track leaving 5 for vocals - I think that was in the era of the Atari 1040ST and Pro 24. I had a small 24 track Tascam line mixer where you could automate mutes via midi.
The Drawmer compressor seemed to be everywhere, and most could only afford one.
Everyone used to have either a microverb or a midiverb, and an SPX 90 if they were lucky. Even though all these were budget options - the big studios all had the AMS or Lexicons - it strikes me know just what an incredible revolution that was. This was what studio reverbs used to look like before the digital revolution:
Then in the 90s computers developed the ability to handle audio and that was that. I do sort of miss those days - I can't shake a feeling that with everything so cheap and easy now it's all quite rudderless and meaningless. My boomer feelings are somewhat similar to the internet - with the benefit of hindsight when it was in the corner of one room in the house and you had to dial up and restrict your time on it, it could have been the sweet spot. Same for home studios, maybe?
My musical journey started in the 1980s, just when home studios were a thing. In just a few short years it was a total revolution - home studios became ubiquitous and eventually good. I'll never forget reading an article in Sound On Sound, must have been mid to late 80s, where a studio engineer was saying they were toys and no-one was ever going to have a hit with one.
I think we all share a bit of sadness at the demise of the proper recording studio.
The Fostex A8 (and its sequels) were everywhere for a while, then it was those ADAT things. If you didn't have the budget for that, a portastudio of some kind. I ended up with a weird 6 track cassette thing that ran at double speed, a Sansui, running timecode on one track leaving 5 for vocals - I think that was in the era of the Atari 1040ST and Pro 24. I had a small 24 track Tascam line mixer where you could automate mutes via midi.
The Drawmer compressor seemed to be everywhere, and most could only afford one.
Everyone used to have either a microverb or a midiverb, and an SPX 90 if they were lucky. Even though all these were budget options - the big studios all had the AMS or Lexicons - it strikes me know just what an incredible revolution that was. This was what studio reverbs used to look like before the digital revolution:
Then in the 90s computers developed the ability to handle audio and that was that. I do sort of miss those days - I can't shake a feeling that with everything so cheap and easy now it's all quite rudderless and meaningless. My boomer feelings are somewhat similar to the internet - with the benefit of hindsight when it was in the corner of one room in the house and you had to dial up and restrict your time on it, it could have been the sweet spot. Same for home studios, maybe?