Workflow, decision-making, and real-world production insight from Dan Weller
Check Out The Dan Weller Course Here: https://www.kohleaudiokult.com/courses/djent
When we arrived at Dan Weller’s studio, it was immediately clear this was not a room built to impress on paper. It is a space designed to support decisions. Every piece of gear exists for a reason, every layout choice reflects how Dan actually works, and nothing feels ornamental.
This is a modern production environment in the truest sense, compact, intentional, and built around momentum rather than mythology. Dan’s career path, from guitarist and founding member of SikTh to producer and mixer for artists such as Enter Shikari, Bury Tomorrow, Caskets, and Holding Absence, explains exactly why the studio feels the way it does. It is a musician’s room that happens to be technically excellent, not the other way around.
A studio built around flow, not friction
Dan’s room is primarily a mixing and post-production space, however it remains flexible enough to track when needed. There is enough distance between the listening position and the performers to keep perspective, and enough space for bands to be present without hovering over every move.
That balance mirrors Dan’s broader approach to production. He is deeply aware that creativity evaporates when workflow becomes clunky. Everything in the room is wired, ready, and predictable, allowing him to move quickly without second-guessing the setup.
Guitar production as a practical craft
Dan’s guitar setup reflects years of real-world use. A Diezel VH4 anchors the rig, supported by other trusted heads that have earned their place through reliability rather than novelty. A switching system keeps everything live, letting him compare tones instantly and move through songs in real time rather than freezing creativity into rigid stages.
While amp simulations are very much part of his modern workflow, Dan still values the feel of a real amplifier. When he does use heads, he often pairs them with a reactive load rather than running loud cabinets in the room. The advantage is not just volume control. A reactive load preserves the physical response of an amp under the fingers while offering the flexibility of impulse responses later.
As Dan points out, one real cabinet gives you one sound. A reactive setup paired with high-quality IRs gives you many genuinely usable options, which can be the more sensible choice in a production context. The key is restraint and intent.
Avoiding sameness in modern production
We talked openly about why so much modern heavy music can end up sounding similar. Dan traced it back to periods where shared presets and identical starting points dominated workflows. Entire records lived in the same tonal space because they were built from the same templates.
Today, the tools are better than ever. The challenge is not capability, it is taste. Dan is clear that individuality starts with the band. If the music itself is adventurous, production choices can follow. If the song needs a functional, solid foundation, then chasing novelty for its own sake usually works against it.
His own tonal references still include the records that shaped him early on, Metallica’s Black Album, mid-90s Pantera, guitar tones with weight, clarity, and authority. Those records endure because they are physical and emotional, not because they followed rules.
Monitoring that tells the truth
Monitoring is one of the most revealing aspects of the studio. Dan uses Kii Audio cardioid monitors, designed to project forward with extreme focus while minimising room interaction through DSP and phase control.
His reaction to them is refreshingly honest. At first they can feel almost unsettlingly clear. Then you realise why they matter. They allow decisions you can trust, however they also reveal every problem. That level of transparency can be mentally demanding, which is why Dan still values smaller, more characterful speakers alongside them.
Different speakers offer different perspectives. Learning to manage that shifting perception is part of the job.
The mental side of mixing
One of the most valuable discussions during the visit had nothing to do with gear.
Dan spoke candidly about ear fatigue, confidence swings, and the danger of endless tweaking. His solution is deceptively simple. A timer.
He works in short, focused blocks and stops when the timer ends, even if he is mid-move. This external discipline prevents spiralling, sharpens instinct, and avoids the trap of fixing problems caused by tired ears. It is a reminder that productivity is often about boundaries, not effort.
A vocal chain designed to remove doubt
Dan’s vocal chain exists to eliminate uncertainty. After extensive shootouts, he committed to a high-end tube microphone paired with a Tube-Tech CL 1B and a Chandler RS124-style compressor.
The CL 1B remains revered for a reason. Dan describes its defining quality as control without obvious artefacts. You can hit it hard without pumping, without the audible “tail” that gives compression away. The Chandler adds weight and density without sounding like an effect.
The result is confidence. When you know the capture is right, you stop questioning the gear and focus entirely on performance and emotion.
Instruments with history and purpose
The guitars in the room tell stories. Longstanding PRS instruments from early label days sit alongside modern studio tools, including EverTune-equipped guitars for sessions where tuning stability is critical.
Dan is pragmatic about the trade-offs. EverTune can subtly affect feel and tone, however in a studio environment it can be the difference between a usable take and a lost day. The point is not ideology, it is getting the job done.
A piano that invites ideas
One of the most musical elements of the studio is a 1977 Yamaha U3 upright. Chosen from a room full of supposedly identical pianos, it stood out immediately for its tone and character.
It also includes a silent MIDI retrofit, allowing Dan to capture acoustic microphones and MIDI simultaneously. This preserves the feel of a real instrument while opening creative doors later. It is a perfect example of Dan’s philosophy, use technology to support ideas, not replace them.
From experience to education
Dan’s journey, from hearing Metallica in the early 90s, picking up guitar at 15, forming SikTh, and learning production inside real studios long before online tutorials existed, explains his resistance to rigid rules.
Experience taught him that perfection is not the goal. Impact is. If someone wants to hear the song again, you have done your job.
That thinking now feeds directly into an upcoming course with Kohle Audio Kult. Titled The DJENT Mixing Ritual, the course revisits SikTh’s Part of the Friction in a full 2025 remix, complete with original multitracks. Participants can mix the song themselves, submit their version, and receive professional feedback from Kristian Kohle.
The course can be purchased individually or accessed by joining the Kult, and it represents a rare opportunity to see how long-term experience translates into modern decision-making.
The takeaway
This studio is not about excess. It is about clarity.
Every choice reduces friction. Every tool earns its place. The room exists to support instinct, discipline, and emotion rather than endless tweaking.
Whether through his records, his studio, or his teaching, Dan Weller’s message is consistent. Stop chasing perfection. Make something people want to hear again.
Check Out The Dan Weller Course Here: https://www.kohleaudiokult.com/courses/djent
