My Favorite Room: Eric Dane meets with his muse in his recording studio
Briefly

My Favorite Room: Eric Dane meets with his muse in his recording studio
"It's purely a creative space. There are no deadlines. There are no have-to's. It's just something I do for me. When you design a recording studio, the first thing you want to do is treat the room to make sure the sound is good, so you're getting an accurate depiction of the music as it was played or recorded."
"I love everything about music, and I love making music. We're a pretty musical family, but we are closeted musicians. I would argue that I'm still - to this day - not musical, but I love doing it. It's my hobby."
"The initial build took about a month. But it's taken about five years to accumulate all the stuff I needed to get it right. So I have bass traps, wall panels, diffusers and Gobos and all kinds of fun stuff that makes no sense to most people and rarely makes sense to me."
Eric Dane, known for television roles in shows like Grey's Anatomy and The Last Ship, has invested approximately $150,000 in a personal recording studio within his Beverly Hills farmhouse. The 150-square-foot space serves as a creative outlet where Dane produces music using electrical instruments, primarily keyboards and synthesizers. He describes himself as not particularly musical despite his passion for music-making. The studio was designed with professional acoustic treatment including bass traps, wall panels, diffusers, and movable partitions to ensure accurate sound quality. The space took about a month to initially build but five years to fully equip. Dane emphasizes that the studio represents a pressure-free creative space with no deadlines or obligations, distinguishing it from his professional acting work.
Read at Los Angeles Times
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