Typically, the standard rate includes a house engineer to run the software and hardware. If you’re a producer who wants to “dry hire” the room (renting the space without staff), that often comes at a discounted rate, provided you’re qualified to use the gear.
Files: Backing tracks or session files on a thumb drive (or cloud link). Others includes:
Instruments: Your guitar/bass (though the studio may have “house” gear).
Vocal Prep: Lyric sheets and plenty of water.
Payment: Whatever remains on your balance!
Morgeez studios have a limit on guests to prevent distractions and protect expensive equipment. It’s usually best to keep it to 1–2 essential collaborators. Always ask first!
Rarely. Recording is the “tracking” phase. Mixing (balancing the sounds) and Mastering (final polish for distribution) are separate processes that require extra time and, often, a separate fee.
Morgeez studios helps client outsource a “Backline” list. This usually includes a drum kit (often minus cymbals/snare), a few classic amps, and perhaps a weighted MIDI keyboard.
If you’re bringing a beat or a backing track, ensure it is a high-quality WAV or AIFF file (not a compressed MP3). If you’re bringing a session from another studio, make sure all files are consolidated so no audio is “missing” when the project opens.
Morgeez Studios runs bookings as per scheduled by the calendar dates and times. The Studio requires 48 to 72 hours’ notice to cancel or reschedule without losing your deposit.
Usually, yes, but you should bring a hard drive to transfer them. Some studios charge a small “archiving fee” or “data transfer fee” for the time it takes to bounce every individual track out for you.
A solo rapper might finish recording vocals for a rap song in 2 hours, while a full rock band might take 10+ hours to track drums, bass, guitars, and vocals properly. It’s all mostly estimated times as every session is not the same depending on the artists or vocal performers.
