Working across the film and television music media landscape, composer, playwright, novelist, musician and TV producer, Scooter Pietsch (pēch) has moved on from the 2,000-sq-ft recording facility that hosted his work on thousands of TV series episodes, including ABC Family’s Pretty Little Liars, USA Network’s Burn Notice, USA’s All Dogs Go To Heaven and E!’s Keeping Up with the Kardashians to a new 350-sq-ft studio in a building attached to his Studio City home.
Having met WSDG founding partner John Storyk via Sound Designer and mutual friend Nevin Steinberg (Hamilton, Dear Evan Hansen), engaged WSDG to design his new studio. An on-site visit in 2019 from WSDG Partners/Project Manager, Matthew Ballos and Acoustic Engineer, Andy Swerdlow resulted in a concrete design with a floor plan and presentation drawings that make the most of the production, recording, mixing and listening potential of the site. Pietsch and his three-man construction team went to work on the studio build-out, framing, sheet-rocking the control room/composing room and fully isolating the compact vocal booth. In early 2020, the ScooterMusic Studio was session ready.
The size of the facility dictated minimal space for outboard gear. He installed ATC SMC25A monitors with Adam Sub10 MkII subwoofers, while two Brent Averill vintage Neve 1073 mic preamps handle vocals, guitars and basses. A UAD Apollo X4 serves as the audio interface, with a 2019 Mac Pro 3.2GHz 16 Core Intel Xeon with 128GB RAM for recording.
‘I wanted to create something very different from my previous studio,’ Pietsch explains. ‘Not just in size, but in look and feel. I went with a clean modern all white look. The lighting is Philips Hue smart lights, and white is the absolute best surface to reflect colour. We also installed Nanoleaf Canvas lights in the vocal booth, which although small, is completely floated and thanks to some clever workarounds eliminates the need for a music stand or floor-standing mic.
‘The ability to change lighting moods in sessions is always a fun/creative way to inspire the work. We also deployed a camera in the main room so singers can maintain eye contact with us on a monitor and vice versa. Music and lyrics are displayed via iPad. In contrast to my previous facility, this new studio is attached to the house, a whole other thing to get used to. But, thanks to WSDG’s meticulous soundproofing and construction design, my near 100dB doesn’t bother anyone.
‘In addition to a wide range of film and TV programming underscore and theme composing, I write and produce songs with other artists and also do a considerable amount of theatrical playwriting and musical composing,’ he adds. ‘I needed a truly flexible production environment and that’s exactly what I got.’
Ballos and Swerdlow collaborated remotely from WSDG’s Highland, NY, office on the studio’s acoustic plan. They specified the installation of six custom ‘split joist’ suspended ceiling clouds and six additional clouds flush mounted to the sloping ceiling walls. ‘This studio is unique from a number of perspectives,’ Ballos observes. ‘Situated in the hills above LA’s Studio City, it’s graced by large picture windows providing amazing pool and neighbouring hillside views and brilliant natural light.’ ‘The studio building was skillfully sighted not only from the view perspective, but also to provide a surprising sense of isolation even though it’s in the midst of a densely populated area,’ Swerdlow says. ‘Scooter's construction team did a terrific job, and because they adhered scrupulously to our acoustic plan they created a warm, tight room that sounds exactly the way we pictured it.’