LOS ANGELES – Tom McCauley didnt plan on making house calls when he started in the music business.
As a recording engineer, McCauley made a good living working out of the many commercial studios that had grown up throughout the Los Angeles area to serve the music, film and television industries.
But with the advent of software that allows high-end recording from a personal computer, the 53-year-old has traded the quasi-industrial atmosphere of the commercial studio for his customers garages or living rooms.
On a recent Monday afternoon, McCauley opened a wooden gate to the backyard of a house, walked past a pool and into a studio converted from a guesthouse. He sat in front of dual computer monitors, opened up Pro Tools recording software and tested microphones.
The old days were big budgets, top-of-the-line equipment and How do you want your espresso and can I get it for you, McCauley said. I do miss that a bit. And at the time, even just 10 years ago, it didnt seem like that could ever end, ever go away.
Although nobody officially tracks the number of recording studios, the consensus among industry experts is that the big commercial facilities have taken a major hit. They estimate that as many as half of the Los Angeles areas commercial studios have closed or been sold to artists for private use.
A key reason is that recording software emulates what old studio consoles and tape-recorders used to do – at a fraction of the price. Among the most widely used programs are Avid Technology Inc.s Pro Tools, Steinberg Media Technologies Cubase and Apple Inc.s GarageBand.
You used to patch everything into a big console. Now you can plug everything into a computer, he said. And editing music using tape wasnt easy. Now you just click and drag a mouse across the screen.
While sales of recorded music have dropped in recent years, putting even more pressure on recording studios to cut costs, the market for software and other computer-related music equipment has gone way up.
The total computer music market went from just under $140 million in sales in 1999 to almost a half-billion dollars in 2008, according to NAMM, the trade group for music retailers and manufacturers.
In some ways weve come full circle, said Maureen Droney, senior director of the Recording Academys Producers & Engineers Wing. Weve gone back to being small and entrepreneurial. People still look to commercial studios when they have something to offer that they cant do at home. But, as it is, the recording studio business started with people starting small funky studios, oftentimes in bedrooms and garages.
And with more artists recording themselves and leaving the commercial studios behind, engineers and other professionals are finding fewer places to work, Droney said.
Some have downsized and built their own home studios. Others, such as McCauley, work the circuit of small facilities in bedrooms and garages. Some have left the industry altogether.
Its sort of sad that a lot of artists feel they have to record their own records when there are people who love the technical side of recording who are being left out, Droney said.
At Clear Lake Audio in North Hollywood, business isnt what it used to be, and owner Brian Levi says part of the reason is the ease of digital recording.
Going from the analog age to the digital age, going from one song to another on tape used to take 30 minutes, but with Pro Tools software it takes about a minute, Levi said. So we just lost 28, 29 minutes of time we could bill a client. So you add that up over a year and tell me how much it is.
Ellis Sorkin runs Studio Referral Service of Calabasas, connecting artists to studios that are his clients. In recent years, he said, his list has been getting shorter.
Many of the older, larger studios have been sold to big producers or artists and are used solely for that persons projects, he said.
Part of the reason that the free-standing studios are struggling, he said, is their owners incurred high costs building them and paying off high-priced equipment. Home studios – whether owned by artists themselves or by recording engineers working on the cheap – dont have that kind of overhead.
Any place that was built as a studio, theres a lot of money thats spent, a couple million dollars maybe, Sorkin said. People are spending $20,000 to $100,000 on home studios.
Theres a big difference in cost.
Still, there are drawbacks to home recording that have kept many professional studios in business. One key difference is quality.
When I walk into a home studio to work, I never really know what Im walking into, said McCauley, the recording engineer. Its sort of a crapshoot. The consistency in terms of quality of equipment or tuning or acoustics that the old commercial studios offered just isnt there in home studios.
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