

Bally Rehearsal Studios.
Tottenham Hale, N17. London.
Bally Studios live 8-track recordings.
Recording Options.
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Recording
Hire of studio charged at exactly the same rate
Studio 2
1 Month - £1450 a month
2 Months - £1350 a month
3 Months - £1300 a month
4 - 6 Months - £1200 a month
7 - 12 months - £1100 a month
Studio 3
1 Month - £1050 a month
2 Months - £995 a month
3 Months - £975 a month
4 - 6 Months - £925 a month
7 - 12 months - £895 a month
Studio 5
1 Month - £1050 a month
2 Months - £995 a month
3 Months - £975 a month
4 - 6 Months - £925 a month
7 - 12 months - £895 a month
Bally Studios 8 Track recording sessions can be tailored to your exact needs, based on your budget and how much help you need. The recording process is split into two parts:
1) Recording your music.
2) Editing/mixing.
First you need to get your music recorded, for which you will pay for
The Studio.
You hire the studio on an hourly basis, paying exactly the same rate as you would for a rehearsal, which is between £12 and £17 per hour, depending on the studio and the time of the week that you book in for. There's no extra fees for sound engineers, since all bands
Recording equipment + Set-up.
Then an additional flat fee of £50 is charged for both:
a) hire of all equipment:
- 8-Track recorder, all microphones, cables, microphone stands, SD cards, acoustic treatment, monitors, everything that you need to record your music to an 8-Track format.
b) Set-up and packdown of recording equipment.
The equipment will then be set up for you in advance by one of our staff members, with all of the microphones positioned in place so that you only need to adjust them to your liking, and then at the end of the session our staff member will pack them down at the end of the session.
1) Do It Yourself - Record and self-produce your own music.
Price: + hire of studios to be charged at standard rehearsal studio rate.
What's included:
Hire of all recording equipment, video tripods, set up and pack down. = A flat fee of £50, regardless of rental duration, + studio rental charged at the usual rehearsal rate.The complete package.1 - Hire of all recording equipment,
A new service, from March 2022 for you to record your rehearsals.
Record your rehearsals to live 8-track recordings in all of your rehearsals.
- Hire of 8/16 track recorder and all microphones/equipment that you need.
- We set all of the microphones up so that they're ready in place when you arrive.
- We then set up the recorder so that everything is ready to record, setting the gain level and checking that everything is recording well.
- We then leave you to it. You then just press "Record + Play" at the start of each take, or leave the recorder running throughout the session.
- At the end of the session we then transfer the stem files to your hard drive, and we pack away everything when you're done.
- You mix everything yourself at home.
All for a flat rate of £55, + the standard rehearsal session price. If you record over consecutive days, then the equipment can be left up overnight for no extra fee.
If you record more than once in a month, the additional hire fees are £35 per time for the additional hires, within 30 days of the initial hire.
Quick links - Prices. Microphones. Types of Sessions.
Examples of recordings. Photos of Set-Ups. Benefits of 8 track recording.
Quick videos to explain the recording service.
Here's a video to show what the recording stem tracks can sound like. This video was recorded by Cody Jr in October 2023.
This video shows a bit more of the whole recording process.


Q - So what’s the deal with this 8 track recording set up?
At the back end of 2021 half the musicians we knew were binge watching The Beatles' “Get Back” documentary about them recording their album "Let It Be" which was recorded in glorious 8 track, meaning the music was recorded from 8 separate microphones/music sources, before being mixed together. Compared to the options that we have today of practically unlimited channels it was stripped back to say the least, and back in the day recording sessions were so expensive that only a lucky few bands could afford them. When The Beatles recorded their debut album “Please Please Me” they knocked it out in a single day, partly on the back of the hundreds of 6+ hour gigs in Hamburg over many years, but mostly due to the cost of £400 per day to hire the studio, at a time when the average house in London cost £2,530. You could have a week in the studio, or a 3 bedroom house in London. Eek!
Nowadays advancements in technology means that it’s possible to buy all of the recording equipment you need to record to 8 track for £1,500 - £2,000 including everything; the recorder, the microphones, the cables, etc. Today many recording studios offer much more sophisticated recording facilities for £250-£300 per day, a fraction of the cost in real terms compared to 60 years ago. They can be a bargain for what you get, no doubt, but in a world where even established acts can still be making less than £10,000 a year from their music, and where COVID-19 has basically wiped out 2 years of touring income for most bands, for many people it's just not affordable.
This is why we have launched our 8-track recording facility. It's designed to get 80%+ of the results at 5% of the cost. It has limits, naturally, but the results that it gets are well worth the paltry investment put into it. Bands that come to us can record their sessions in the same 8 track format that albums like The Beatles “Sgt Peppers…..”, The Beach Boys “Pet Sounds”, Led Zeppelin’s “Led Zeppelin I” and loads more classic albums were recorded in. Most of the Motown records, and Miles Davis’ “Kind Of Blue” was recorded to 3 track, so 8 tracks can be plenty, depending on your circumstances.
Q - So I can record an album to the same quality as those albums?!?!
Whoah, hold on….. probably not. But that’s also looking at it in the wrong way. Some of those bands had thousands of hours of playing together behind them, they had world class acoustics with 30 ft high ceilings, hand made microphones with some of the world’s best audio engineers, and those albums have been mixed, mastered and polished by some of the world’s greatest engineers for months at a time, at great cost. It’s just not realistic to expect the same results at such a price reduction, but that doesn't mean you can't get great recordings quickly and cheaply.
This service fills a gap in the market for bands that simply cannot afford to pay thousands of pounds to record their music. and it allows bands to record their music quickly and cheaply so that it can be released, which in turn will hopefully gain the band the attention and the financial backing that they need to move onto the next level. It’s not meant to compete with professional studios, it’s a perfect compliment to them. In the short term a band will get a good recording of their music to promote themselves and build a fan-base, and in the long term the direct format of this kind of recording session, and the limitations that the recording format has will allow bands to learn, to become more aware of what they need to improve, and to become empowered, relying on themselves to make progress, as opposed to waiting for someone else to come along and do it for them.

Q - So how does it work?
You book your rehearsal session as usual, in whatever studio you want (we recommend the bigger studios so that you have more room for setting everything up) paying the usual rehearsal studio rate, and then you can hire this extra equipment on top of it, to turn the rehearsal into a recording session.
Q - What equipment is available for the band to use?
- A Zoom R16 recorder, a 16 track recorder that can record 8 track simultaneously, complete with multiple 32GB SD cards, to record as long as you want.
- The microphones, cables, microphone stands, etc.
- Active speakers so you can check/monitor what you're recording once it's been recorded.
- x4 mobile phone tripods so that you can set up the mobile phones to record the visuals of the band.
- Everything that you usually get in your rehearsal session, such as the PA system, the amplifiers, the drum kit, the cymbals (if you need them), exactly the same as you’d have in a rehearsal session but with the added benefit of being able to record your session onto an 8 track recorder.
Q - What hire options do we have, and what do they cost?
Hire of complete package:
8 track recorder, microphones, cables, stands, mobile phone tripods, headphone amps, headphones, everything that you need to do all of your own recordings =
£55 for hire of equipment, with everything set up for you and packed down at the end of the session.
£35 per additional session booked within 30 days of the first recording..
Have your own laptop with interface?
If you want to record direct to your own laptop you can also hire everything apart from the 8 track recorder.
Microphones, cables, stands, mobile phone tripods, headphone amps, headphones, etc =
£29 per session for single session.
£39 per month for unlimited use of everything.
So here's some examples of what these sessions would cost:
Per day.
Saturday, 12pm - 8pm in Studio 2. :
8 hour studio hire = £105.
Recording equipment = £55
Total: £160 for 8 hours of recording, £20 an hour.
For a long weekend.
Friday, 7pm - 11pm.
Saturday 12pm - 8pm
Sunday 12pm - 8pm
in Studio 2 hire of all equipment, including us setting it up for you on Friday, leaving it set up until Sunday evening, and then packing it all away for you.
20 hours studio hire = £282
Recording equipment + set-up/ = £55
Total: £328.50 for 20 hours of full recording, or about £16.50an hour.
For a month.
3) One month hire of Studio 2 for all weekday daytimes, hire of all equipment, without set up.
1 month hire of Studio 2 on a 24/7 basis = £1350
Recording equipment and initial set-up for one month = £55
Total: £1405 for one month of recording studio time, to record whenever you want, or just over £45 a day for EVERYTHING you need to record for a whole month. If you're a sound engineer or a record label, the possibilities are endless.
As you can see, there's plenty of option for any budget or schedule.
Q - What microphones do we get included to record our session?
Here are the microphones that we provide you with. We've linked each of them to the Thomann page, so that you can see the specs and reviews of them all. If you end up buying anything when clicking on these links then we'll also earn a nice commision from you doing so, allowing you to support a small, independent local business without any extra cost to yourself, while paying the lowest price for these products possible.
x 1 Shure Beta 52 Kick Drum Mic - Bass drum and bass amplifier.
x 1 Sennheiser E 602 II -Bass drum and bass amplifier.
x 1 Lewitt LCT 040 matched stereo pair – Drumkit overheads.
x1 Rode M3 Condenser - Hi Hats, or distant guitar amplifiers.
x2 Sennheiser E609 Silver = Close guitar amplifiers.
x4 AKG Perception Live P4 = Snare drum, rack toms.
x4 Shure SM58s – Vocals.
x1 Shure SM57 - Guitar, snare, vocals.
x1 Pair T-Bone EM700s condensers.
x2 Sennheiser MD400s, vintage from 1979.
The keyboards and bass guitar can also be plugged directly into the recorder. We also have a Sonitus Acoustics dampening muffler that you can put into the bass drum to dampen down the sound of the bass drum, should you wish to. Here's a video of what it does:
Q - What speakers can we use to check/monitor the music?
We provide you with a pair of active Presonus Eris E3.5 to make sure that the recorded signals are well recorded.
Q - How do we hear the vocals whilst recording?
Via an 8 channel Behringer Powerplay HA8000 V2 headphone amplifier, which will allow the band to monitor the vocals during the session. You'll get a Behringer ULTRALINK MS8000 that will split all of the microphones into two paths, allowing you to monitor and record the microphone signals independently, and we'll provide you with x5 Superlux HD681 Studio Monitoring Headphones, to allow you to hear the vocals throughout the session. There's also the option to have the vocals coming out of the PA system at the same time that they're recorded, which can be tricky, but as we'll show later, can get great results.
Q - Can you remind me what backline you have at the studios?
Sure, here's a link to the backline equipment that you can use, for no extra charge at all.
Q - How much help will I get with the recording?
We will set everything up for you, so that it's ready for you when you get there. Then we'll check that everything is recording properly and show you how to use everything. Then we leave you to it, we don't stay in the session while you are recording. This is the biggest difference between the service that we offer and the usual recording sessions that other studios offer. There are two reasons that these sessions are so much cheaper and why they can get results quicker:
a) The simple, stripped back format of 8 track recordings.
b) The fact that you have to do most of the work yourself.
You'll only get help from us with technical aspects of the equipment. We'll provide you with the gear and show you how to set it up, and if you have any problems with the equipment then we'll help you with that, but otherwise you'll engineer/record the songs yourself, or you have the option to bring your own sound engineer with you. Bally Studios will not help you engineer the sessions, but this format is specifically designed to need less input anyway. Once everything is all set up you can either just let it record the whole session as one single track and split the audio up at home later, or you can press record + play before every song you record, and stop the recording at the end of every take so that all of the individual tracks are separated. Think of it like a live gig, where the sound engineer sets up the microphones at the soundcheck and then leaves them in place for the whole gig without needing to adjust them. If anything then goes wrong during your sessiosn p
The recorder comes with a 32GB SD card, which will record 530 minutes (8 hours 50 minutes) of 8-track recording at the highest quality, 24 bit/44.1 kHz and WAV format setting. If you use the 16 track function then you’ll double the amount of tracks, which will halve the amount of time that you can record for, which brings it down to 4 hours 25 minutes of 16 track recordings. However, we’ll have multiple SD Cards in the office, so you can also keep on swapping them over, and so long as you bring a large enough external hard drive, you can record as much as you want to. We've included photos below of the kind of recording set-ups you can use. You'll need to set up the gain levels and work out where to point the microphones and everything like that, (unless you want to pay us to do that part for you) and you'll be provided with extensive guides that you can use to make sure that you get the most out of your sessions, including information packs you can study before the session to help you prepare for it in advance, and this is the biggest reason why we're able to offer this service for so cheap, where you can have everything that you need to record your music for the price of a round of drinks.
Types of Recording Session available
Here's the kind of sessions that you can do with us.
1) Full Band Live 8 track recording.
The band all plays live, just like you normally would in your session, and each individual instrument is recorded as detailed in the boxes below. You can either have the vocals coming out of the PA system, or being monitored by the band in their headphones. Each band will have different set ups depending on what members/instruments you have, of course, but here are some examples of how the band can set up the recorder. In this set up there are no overdubs at all, everything is recorded live, and raw. You can then mix the recorded music at home, and then put these recordings on all of the distribution platforms out there, including Spotify, Apple Music, Deezer, Tidal, etc for a one-off £30 fee, and start connecting your music with people.

2) Full Band Overdubbed 16 track recording.
In this scenario you record the drummer first, using this set up to capture the drums:

Once you have the drums all recorded, you can then overdub the following instruments over the drums, which you can do in the following ways, depending on your set-up. (The recorder is actually a 16 track recorder that can only record 8 inputs at once, so this set up is very easy to do.) In this set up you can have multiple microphones on different instruments, allowing you to blend the different signals together for a more layered sound, or you can even layer different takes of the same instrument over each other, for a "wall of sound" recording.


3) Drummers Solo recording.
Drummers can record themselves playing drums alone, and use the recording when applying to join bands, when advertising their skills as a drum teacher, or even just for them to have a permanent record of their drumming skills. If you want to record the visuals as well we can also provide you with some mobile phone tripods free of charge so that you can also record the video of yourself playing on your phone, and later you can synchronise the sound that you capture from the 8 track to the video recordings. Most people have a phone camera that supports 1080p or even 4K recording as standard. If you can borrow 3 phones from your band members/friends or family you can record something like this, which has an 8 microphone, 4 camera set up.
4) A band live session with audio and visuals.
Most bands just accept that they’ll have to wait until they “make it” before they record their own live sessions, but why? With a combination of our studios and equipment, and your songs and mobile phones, you can record your own live sessions. We can provide 4 video tripods along with the 8 track recorder so that you can all use your mobile phones to record visuals of yourself individually, and then along with the 8 track recorder you can record a “live session" recording to either put on YouTube to send to record labels, promoters, publishers, or to connect with your potential fan-base yourself, directly. You can use the individual footage that you all record on your phones to edit into a multiple-camera set up, much like the video below, which has the exact same set up that we'd have, 8 track audio with 4 cameras, the only difference being that your camera shots will be from a fixed position, as opposed to having a cameraman. You can add interviews, different versions of your songs, covers, whatever. If you never go on to become commercially successful then at least you’ll have this recording, and if you do go on to become commercially successful just imagine how excited your fans will be to see this footage of the band before their ascent through the music industry!
Here's an example of a session that our studio manager Mark recorded with his band, Bulbous, with the 8 track recorder, with 2 mobile phones recording the visuals. He then mixed the audio himself in Garageband, and then edited the visuals with iMovie, both of which are available for free. This is just one song that he recorded within the 3 hour session, which included setting everything up and packing it down at the end too, and then he spent a couple of hours at home doing a quick edit of it, a total of 5 hours investment of his time. If Mark had paid for the studio time and the equipment then he would have paid £62 in total for everything, to get a 45 minute live session done, which would have taken an additional 2-3 hours of his time to edit the rest of the sessions. Remember, Mark has never studied audio engineering or video editing, he's learned his skills on the job by using a bit of planning and logical thinking. He doesn't have access to anything that any other band couldn't get for free also, so this video gives a realistic expectation of what bands can achieve for an investment of £60 - £80.
5) Pre-production.
By using our facilities you can record the band as a whole, and then take the stem tracks home and the guitarist, for example, can mute their guitar playing and try out new ideas, or they can work out some new guitar lines to overdub later. You can also use the recordings to approach a producer and say “this is what we sound like, did you want to help us get a better recording?” They’ll be able to use the stem tracks to really investigate the music, and it’ll likely have a much better chance of success than sending them a recording from a mobile phone.

Q - So what can I expect to get out of the sessions?
You can expect to get a great recording, with everything mic'ed up individually to allow you to balance out the levels of all of the band members/instruments, and where you have a huge amount of control over how the music sounds. You can EQ the guitars to make them cut through the mix, or have the rhythm guitar panned to the right and the lead guitar panned to the left. Tricks like this means it’s much easier for the individual guitars to be heard, such as in the video below. In Oct 2023 Cody Jr used our 8 track recording facility for 5 hours in total, and managed to record 4 songs in full in that time, with a total of 24 takes between those songs. Here's what it sounded like with less than 1 hou 45 minutes of mixing.
You can EQ or compress the bass drum so that it sounds punchy, you can make it louder, you can take out the high end on the hi-hats to let the cymbals cut through, add reverb to the main vocals, add a low cut filter to the bass to make it sound tighter and have a lot more control over how your music sounds. You can do whatever you want.
Q - But I don’t know how to record a band's music……
And most likely you haven’t tried to either! In the same way that the only way to learn how to drive a car is to get behind the wheel and drive it, there's an strong argument that the best way to develop your sound engineering and production skills is to do the same – to actually record your music. Learning sound engineering from a teacher can be a great way to learn, but you may end up parroting their particular methods instead of developing your own style. Developing your skills by actually recording your music will allow you to learn methods that are built around your musical style and around your signature sound. There’s no substitute for actually doing the thing that you want to do, and with everyone having access to a computer at home with widely available music recording software for free, the only limits that you have is how much time you're able to spare.
Q - Do you have any examples of stuff you've recorded with the exact set up that we'll be using?
As of March 3rd 2022 we only have a few recordings that we've done with this set up, some of which were done in a 1 hour quick session in late Feb 2022 by our staff members Mark and Oliver. They spent 25 minutes setting up the microphones, and Mark went behind the kit thrashed out for about 10 minutes, and this was what was recorded with the overhead microphones only, straight out of the box, no effects/treatment, nothing.
We then put that signal through Audacity, a free recording software, added the generic preset compressor at a ratio of 4:1, and that recording becomes this:
The snare was mic'ed up too, it sounded like this at first:
Add a bit of pre-set compression to it at a 10:1 ratio and it becomes:
The kick drum has a microphone on it too, that sounded like this:
Stick a pre-set compressor on that at a ratio of 10:1 as well and you get:
Then we mixed it all together in less than 10 minutes, and you get:
Now of course, the recording isn't going to win a Grammy for Best Production, but it's not meant to. This recording was archived after 1 hour of total investment, including setting up the equipment, recording it, mixing it, and even uploading it to the internet. You can clearly hear each part of the drum kit, the kick drum, the snare, the cymbals, and the recording sounds like what you'd hear in the room. Remember, this is with less than an hour's investment IN TOTAL, and only using free recording software. That's the point of this recording process, that you get usable results quickly and cheaply, and that you can start to learn about the process yourself. Imagine what results you can get if you put a lot more time into it?
Here's another recording session that we did where we recorded a 63 minute live album in 3.5 hours, including mic'ing up, preparing the room, with the band going through their set in front of 12 friends who were present and watching the session, and then doing a rough mix, before then posting it on the internet. At 12pm we turned up to the studios, by 3:30pm everything was finished. Is it a perfect recording? Nope. Was it worth the 3.5 hours and £55 of investment, including the 3.5 hour rehearsal? In our opinion, absolutely. The band had their songs recorded, and between the 3 band members and their 12 friends they'd had a great day with a live album recorded over some beers. In this scenario if the band didn't have enough money to record a basic demo then they could even ask some friends to attend the session, and ask if they could throw some money into the pot towards the cost of it. In this session the sound of the vocals was also coming out of the PA at the same time as it was being sent to the recording device, so there were much more considerations to think of, like trying to work out how to make it so that the PA vocals weren't picked up in the drum microphones.
This is the kind of set up that you'll have, which is the exact same set up that we used above, microphones draped over the guitar amplifiers like this:

x2 stereo condensor microphones are set up over the kit, like so:

The kick drum can be mic'ed up with either the Shure Beta 52 (as it is in this case) or the Sennheiser E 602 II microphone, or if you have enough channels both of them.

the toms and the snare are mic'ed up too:


