Wasted studio time is the most common and most avoidable problem in recording. Not wasted in a creative sense — noodling and experimenting are part of the process — but wasted on logistics: hunting for a cable, bouncing a reference track you forgot, arguing about the key because you never locked it in before the session. At $100–$200 an hour, that kind of friction is expensive. At a flat-rate membership studio, it's still a frustrating way to spend a session that could have been twice as productive.
This checklist is organized by category. Not everything on it applies to every session — a vocalist tracking a single doesn't need a guitar cable. Read through, mark what applies to your situation, and check it the night before.
Digital Files and Project Materials
This is where most sessions fall apart before a single note is recorded. If you're doing overdubs on an existing project, or bringing a produced instrumental to track vocals over, the file prep is the session prep.
- Session file or stems, exported from your DAW — Bring the original session file plus consolidated stems. If you're on Logic and the studio runs Pro Tools, you need stem exports. If both sides run the same DAW, bring the project file and verify the sample rate and bit depth match. Standard is 48kHz / 24-bit for most professional sessions; ask in advance.
- Reference tracks — At least two finished songs that communicate the sonic direction you're going for. Not to copy, but to give the engineer a target for EQ, dynamics, and overall feel. Bring them on your phone or a USB drive.
- Tempo and key locked in — Know your BPM. Know your key. If you changed either since the last session, tell the engineer before they set up. "We might transpose it" is something to resolve in rehearsal, not at the start of a paid session.
- Lyrics sheet — Printed or on your phone. Engineers appreciate being able to follow along; it helps them catch takes that are off in ways that might not be obvious on the spot.
- Chord chart or lead sheet — If there are session musicians involved, or if the engineer needs to follow the arrangement to punch in at the right spots.
- USB drive or portable SSD — For transferring files both to and from the studio. Cloud transfers work too, but bring a physical backup. Studios have lost files to internet outages during uploads and you don't want to be in that situation at the end of a session.
Instruments and Gear
What you bring depends on the studio and what they supply. Most professional studios in Santa Monica have a backline of some kind, but "backline" is not universal. Call ahead and confirm exactly what's in the room before you pack.
- Your instrument, tuned and set up — Fresh strings or heads if applicable. A guitar that hasn't been restrung in six months is not going to respond the way you want in a close-mic session. This is not the day to discover your action is too high or your intonation is out.
- Cables — Instrument cable, patch cable if needed. Studios have spares, but bringing your own means you know the condition. One intermittent cable can kill 20 minutes of troubleshooting.
- Picks, capos, straps, spare strings — The obvious stuff. You will forget one of these things if you don't pack deliberately.
- Pedalboard, if applicable — Already set and organized. Know which pedals you actually need for this session vs. which you're bringing out of habit.
- Drumsticks, brushes, mallets — Even if the studio has a kit. Bring your own sticks and your own snare head if you have one that's dialed in. The difference between your snare and their stock snare can be significant.
- Headphones — Your own if you're particular about the monitoring mix. Studios provide headphones but having your own is better for comfort during long takes.
Vocal Session Specifics
If you're tracking vocals, the prep is mostly about your voice and your comfort in the booth, not gear.
- Warmed up before you arrive — Seriously. Don't use the first 30 minutes of studio time to warm up your voice. Arrive warm and ready. This means doing your vocal warm-up at home or in the parking lot, not in the live room.
- No dairy, alcohol, or excessive caffeine on session day — These affect your voice in ways that are hard to compensate for in post. Drink water. The night before matters too.
- Throat coat or preferred tea, if you use it — Studios have coffee. They don't always have your specific tea.
- Lyrics memorized, or printed clearly — Reading lyrics off your phone in the booth introduces visual distraction and head positioning issues. Have them on paper if you need them.
- A clear idea of the emotion and approach for each section — The recording doesn't get better in the mix. A technically clean take that doesn't feel right in the booth won't feel right in the final mix. Know what you want emotionally before you step up to the mic.
Administrative and Logistical Items
The unsexy side of session prep. Skipping this stuff creates friction that compounds through the day.
- Booking confirmation and studio contact — Have the studio's phone number. If you're running late or there's an issue at the front desk, you need to be able to reach someone directly, not dig through a website.
- Payment method sorted in advance — If it's a pay-per-hour studio, know the rate, know whether they require a deposit, and know how they accept payment. Showing up with cash to a card-only studio wastes the first 15 minutes.
- Parking plan — Santa Monica parking is not forgiving. Know where you're going, have a backup lot in mind, and factor in at least 15 minutes for parking logistics. Arriving stressed from parking is a terrible way to start a session.
- Session notes from last time — If this is a continuation of a previous session, bring notes on what worked, what didn't, and where you left off. Don't rely on memory; you will misremember the tempo, the take count, or which version the engineer preferred.
The Mindset Checklist (Underrated)
Studios pick up on anxiety. A nervous performer does worse takes. There's preparation you do the day before that affects the day of.
- Sleep — More than you think you need. Vocal quality, focus, and decision-making all degrade with fatigue. A musician who practiced until 2am and then stumbled into a 10am session at full rate has made a costly tradeoff.
- Played through the material recently — Not the day of the session, but within the last couple of days. Muscle memory needs to be warm, not cold. If you haven't played the songs in two weeks, the session will show it.
- Clear on what you want to accomplish — "Track three songs" is a goal. "Track the verse and chorus of track one and nail the lead vocal for track two" is a session plan. Know the difference going in, and communicate it to the engineer before you start.
- Realistic expectations — Recording takes longer than rehearsing. Decisions take longer when they're being made permanently. A session that produces two fully tracked, great-feeling songs is a successful session. A session that "covered" five songs but got no usable takes is not.
What the Studio Provides (So You Don't Overpack)
Most professional studios in Santa Monica provide at minimum: microphones and mic stands, direct boxes, monitoring headphones, basic outboard gear (compressors, preamps), and a tracking computer with the main DAW. Many also have house keyboards, a drum kit, and various amp options.
Call ahead and ask specifically what's in the room you've booked. The difference between a "fully equipped room" and a "room with a Neve console and a Bösendorfer grand" is significant enough that you want to know before you pack. Studios like 4th Street Recording and The Recording Club in Santa Monica are worth calling specifically to confirm what's in house that day.
The Night-Before Protocol
Pack the night before, not the morning of. Check the list against your gear. Confirm the booking. Lay out what you need. Eat a real dinner. Sleep before midnight. This sounds like obvious advice but it's the thing most people skip, and it's the thing that most often separates a session that flows from one that grinds.
Hourly billing punishes disorganization directly — every minute you spend looking for something is a minute you paid for. Even if you're at a membership studio where the clock pressure is lower, showing up prepared means you spend your time making music, not managing logistics. That's the whole point.