There is something incredibly inspiring about a studio that is clearly built around making music, not impressing people with square footage.
David Dalton’s Driftwork Sound Studio in Austin, Texas, is exactly that kind of place. David is one of our Produce Like A Pro Academy members, and when he gave us a tour of his studio, what really stood out was not just the gear, although there is plenty of lovely gear in there, it was the philosophy behind it.
This is a small home studio, built in a converted garage in a rental house. It is not a massive commercial facility. It is not some perfectly designed, purpose-built room with unlimited budget and infinite space. However, like so many great creative spaces, it works because David has made deliberate choices, solved problems practically, and built a room around the way he actually records.
As David puts it, many of us are in situations that are not ideal, however that does not mean we cannot make great sounds. He has turned the garage into a control room, the living room into a live room, built his own acoustic panels to keep costs down, and created a setup that allows him to record full bands, vocals, horns, percussion, synths, guitars, bass, and whatever else the music calls for.
That, to me, is the spirit of home recording at its best. You make the space work. You learn its limitations. You build around them. Then you get on with the real job, making music.
A Studio Built Around Musical Openness
One of the most refreshing parts of David’s tour is how open he is about the journey of growing as a musician and engineer.
He talks about being more of a musical snob when he was younger, then realising over time that working in music is far richer when you allow yourself to appreciate different styles. That is such an important lesson. The more music you let in, the more vocabulary you have as a producer, engineer, mixer, arranger, and musician.
That openness shows up in the work he is doing now.
One of David’s recent projects is called Voices of Austin, a project featuring immigrant musicians now living in Austin, with artists from Colombia, Mexico, Palestine, Niger, and Guinea. That is exactly the kind of project that stretches you creatively. You are not just capturing instruments, you are learning from people who bring different musical traditions, different rhythmic feels, different tonal ideas, and different cultural experiences into the room.
David describes it as extremely rewarding, and you can hear why. Every time we work on new music, we grow, however when we work with musicians who have developed their craft in different countries and cultures, that growth can be even deeper.
The Heart of the Control Room
David’s 500-series rack gives a good picture of how he likes to work. It is full of pieces that bring colour, shape, saturation, and personality.
He starts with a pair of CAPI VP28 preamps, based on vintage API-style circuits. These have become part of his overhead chain, particularly paired with his JZ Microphones V67s. The combination gives him transformer colour, detail, and the ability to dial in anything from subtle saturation to something more extreme.
Then there are the Kush Audio pieces, two Tweezers and an Electra EQ. What David loves about the Kush design is that the units encourage listening rather than looking. There are not numbers everywhere telling you what you “should” be doing. You turn the knobs until it sounds right. Haha, what a concept.
That is a wonderful discipline, especially in a world where we can so easily become obsessed with settings, presets, screenshots, and recall. There is something powerful about committing to the sound coming out of the speakers.
He also has an AML EZ1073, bringing that classic Neve-style midrange character, alongside an Avedis MA5, another Neve-inspired preamp with its own big, elegant sound. His Burl B1 preamps bring a different flavour again, with saturation he describes as almost tape-like, especially useful on bass and keys through the DI.
The 500-series rack also includes an Electrodyne preamp, which David particularly loves for bass DI, describing it as having a kind of 1960s, Stax-era console flavour. That is the kind of description that tells you he is thinking in records, not spec sheets.
Character Over Cleanliness
David’s interface is a Focusrite Clarett Plus, expanded when needed with a Clarett OctoPre. He is quick to point out that the Focusrite preamps are good, clean preamps. However, because he now has a nice selection of outboard preamps, he often reaches for character instead.
That is a really important point. Clean is not bad. Clean is useful. However, when you have certain pieces that add a particular push, thickness, edge, or softness, those choices can become part of the arrangement before you ever open a plugin.
His vocal and bass chains are a good example.
One of his favourite pieces is an LA-2A-inspired opto compressor, which he loves on vocals and bass. Beneath it is a Coil Audio tube preamp, which he describes as his splurge preamp, built with new old stock components and featuring a negative feedback control. That control lets him move between more brightness, room, and saturation on one end, and a cleaner, darker sound on the other.
That is incredibly useful. On a bright or harsh source, such as violin, he can simply turn the knob and soften the presentation before the sound ever reaches the DAW. That is real engineering. Solve the problem at the source, or at least as early in the chain as possible.
A typical vocal chain for David might be the Coil preamp into the opto compressor, then into a Kush Tweezer to catch faster peaks. Slow compression for tone and control, fast compression for safety and shape. Simple, musical, effective.
He also has an Audioscape Golden 58 tube preamp, and he speaks highly of Audioscape not just for the sound, however for the company’s support. When he had a phantom power issue, they sent him a switch and talked him through the fix. That kind of relationship between small manufacturers and working engineers is something worth celebrating.
The Importance of Physical Space, and Physical Media
One of my favourite touches in Driftwork Sound Studio is the stereo setup with a turntable and records from David’s collection.
This is not just nostalgia. It serves a real creative purpose.
David talks about how sitting down as a group and listening to one side of a record can act as a palate cleanser. When musicians are stuck, or have been hearing the same song for hours or days, stepping away and listening to something else together can reset the room.
That is a beautiful idea. Studios are not just technical spaces, they are emotional spaces. Anything that helps musicians get out of their own heads and back into the joy of music is valuable.
Because the studio is small, David built shelves himself for the turntable, records, and other pieces. That DIY approach runs through the whole studio. He has built much of his own furniture so that every piece fits the room properly and uses only the space it needs.
That is something many home studio owners can learn from. Buying studio furniture can be expensive, and it often assumes you have a much larger room than you do. If you are a little bit handy, building your own can be the difference between a cramped room and a functional one.
Microphones That Shape the Drum Sound
David’s microphone choices are some of the most interesting parts of the tour, especially his approach to drums.
His beloved JZ Microphones V67s have become his go-to overheads. He likes that they capture cymbal detail and drum attack without harshness. They are detailed without being overly bright, and he has found that with a balanced drummer, he often does not need tom mics at all.
That is a huge statement, and it says a lot about the mic, the drummer, the room, and the placement. If the overheads are giving you body, attack, low end, and balance, the drum sound can feel more natural and less stitched together.
For kick out, David uses a Stager SR-3 ribbon mic. He is careful not to place it directly in front of the hole, and it gives him a deep, fat, controlled bump. He also uses it on horns, strings, vocals, and brighter sources where the softened high end of a ribbon helps tame the sound.
For kick in, he uses a DPA 4055, which he describes as flat, precise, clean, and capable of handling high SPL. That pairing makes a lot of sense, clean and focused inside, big and characterful outside.
Another favourite is the Beyerdynamic M 160, a hypercardioid ribbon mic. David likes it as a mono drum overhead, often placed over the drummer’s shoulder in addition to a spaced pair. Because it softens the cymbals and gives more emphasis to the shells, it can bring punch and centre image without adding too much hi-hat.
That is a brilliant approach. Sometimes a song simply does not need a huge stereo drum picture. Sometimes a punchy mono overhead, blended with the rest of the kit, gives the track exactly what it needs.
Vocal Mics, Bleed, and Making the Room Work
David’s vocal mic choices are equally thoughtful.
One of his favourites is the Soyuz 017 FET. He describes it as being voiced somewhere around a 67 with hints of 47 character, however very much its own thing. It can saturate with loud singers, which can be beautiful when controlled. For loud vocalists, he often has them sing from 16 to 18 inches back, where the mic still sounds intimate.
That is a great reminder that distance is a tone control. Moving a singer back from the mic can reduce proximity effect, manage saturation, smooth the dynamics, and often produce a more natural performance.
His other favourite vocal mic is a Microphone Parts V251, a tube mic kit based on the 251. David built it himself, which again fits the studio’s whole philosophy, hands-on, practical, curious, and willing to learn.
The V251 has a continuously variable pattern, from omni through cardioid to figure-8. David uses that flexibility in live band situations, sometimes setting the mic between cardioid and figure-8 to create a hypercardioid-like response. With the rear of the mic aimed away from loud sources, he can record a vocalist in the same room as the band and use the bleed creatively.
This is a very old-school idea, and a very good one. Bleed is not always the enemy. Bad bleed is the enemy. Good bleed can glue a track together.
In one example, he used little or no drum reverb on the drum mics because the vocal mic bleed, with vocal compression and reverb, created a subtle compressed drum room sound. That is the sort of thing that can make a recording feel alive.
A Practical, Musical Drum Kit
David’s main drum kit is a hodgepodge, which is often how the best studio kits come together.
The bass drum is an old Yamaha, possibly from the 1980s, chosen for its versatility. He can keep the pillow parallel to the heads for a more open, big low-end sound, or turn it perpendicular so it touches one or both heads for a tighter, punchier tone.
The toms are Ludwig drums that he likes for their punch and ability to speak well, especially with the V67 overheads and CAPI preamps. The snare is a black sparkle Acrolite, a wonderfully versatile studio snare, controlled with Roots EQ dampeners when needed.
David also makes a crucial point about cymbals. He keeps darker, quieter cymbals around because one of the most common drum recording problems is loud, bright cymbals overwhelming the kit. Having alternatives, such as a darker Istanbul crash or lighter, darker Paiste hi-hats, can solve a mix problem before it exists.
That is one of those simple pieces of advice that can save an entire session. The right cymbal is often more important than the right EQ.
Guitar Amps with Real Personality
David’s amp collection is full of useful contrasts.
His main amp is an Allen Amps Accomplice Junior, based around a Fender Deluxe Reverb-style circuit, however with added flexibility. It can run different power tubes, switch to a higher wattage, and includes a master volume that behaves more like a fader than a tone-destroying compromise.
It also has a “Raw” control that moves from clean 1960s Fender-style sparkle into more midrange push and saturation, eventually getting into tweed-like drive. That kind of amp is incredibly useful in a studio because it covers a lot of ground without needing a dozen alternatives.
He also has a Fender Twin Reverb, likely from 1965, for big clean Fender sounds. Then, for almost the opposite flavour, he has a Sears Silvertone 1482 from the early 1960s, which is all midrange and tube saturation, with a cool choppy tremolo.
There is a Music Man amp, a Roland Jazz Chorus 120 for that unmistakable solid-state chorus sound, and even a Peavey Rage 108 that David found by the curb. That little Peavey has a unique distortion circuit, and as he says, sometimes a one-trick pony is exactly what you need in the studio.
That is a great lesson. Not everything in a studio has to be expensive. It has to be useful. Sometimes the weird little cheap amp does something that nothing else does.
Synths, Keys, and Texture Machines
Driftwork Sound Studio also has a lovely selection of synths and keyboards.
There is a Crumar Multiman S3, a vintage late 1970s or early 1980s-style analogue string and polysynth machine with a sound that is classic without being overly familiar. David believes the filters were made by Bob Moog, however the instrument has its own character, different from the usual famous synth sounds of the era.
He also has a Moog Subsequent 37, which handles classic Moog leads, basses, filters, and modulation beautifully. Then there is a Roland D-50, full of those instantly recognisable 1980s digital textures. It is not always the right thing, however sometimes it is exactly the right thing.
There is a Yamaha Reface DX, inspired by the DX7, a Rhodes Mark V that he is lucky enough to have in the room, a 1960s GEM combo organ related to the Vox Jaguar sound, and even a theremin, because you never know when you might need one.
Then there is the Roland Space Echo.
Yes, plugins can do wonderful Space Echo-inspired sounds, and David uses them. However, when you want the feedback to build on itself, or you want to physically manipulate the knobs in real time, the real tape unit still has a particular magic. Add in the onboard spring reverb, and it becomes not just a delay, however an instrument.
Why Driftwork Sound Studio Matters
What I love about David Dalton’s Driftwork Sound Studio is that it represents the reality of so many modern recording spaces.
It is not about waiting until you have the perfect room, the perfect budget, or the perfect commercial facility. It is about building a creative environment where musicians feel comfortable, performances can happen, and the sounds coming in already have intention.
David has built a studio that reflects his taste, his curiosity, his willingness to experiment, and his connection to the Austin music community. The gear is chosen for character. The room is adapted intelligently. The furniture is built to fit the space. The mic choices are musical. The workflow is flexible. The whole place feels like it exists to serve songs.
That is what a great studio should do.
A huge thank you to David Dalton for sharing Driftwork Sound Studio with us, and for being part of the Produce Like A Pro Academy community. It is always inspiring to see members not only building their own spaces, however using them to make meaningful, adventurous music.
Have a marvellous time recording and mixing.
