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Music Room Soundproofing & Acoustic Products

Create the perfect music room experience with products designed to control sound both inside and out. Our soundproofing and acoustic treatments help contain loud music while improving clarity and balance in the room. Shop wall panels, ceiling treatments, soundproof doors and windows, and vibration damping materials to build a room full of creativity and fun.

Music Room Soundproofing & Acoustic Products

Create the perfect music room experience with products designed to control sound both inside and out. Our soundproofing and acoustic treatments help contain loud music while improving clarity and balance in the room. Shop wall panels, ceiling treatments, soundproof doors and windows, and vibration damping materials to build a room full of creativity and fun.

FAQs

To contain music to the room from bothering neighbors (in and out of the building), start with the weak links: doors, windows, and vents. Add a solid core door and install a door seal kit. For music rooms with windows, install window inserts, and seal all gaps. These changes often deliver the biggest isolation jump for the least effort.

Costs range widely depending on the goal and the size of the room. Simple fixes like door seals kits can be a few hundred. Acoustic material will also drive cost up depending on the size of the room. Basically, you can spend as much as you want to achieve a gold-standard level practice space or you can hit a good level without breaking the bank.

No. Acoustic panels absorb echo inside the room; they don’t block sound from passing through walls. For isolation, you need mass + airtightness + decoupling (e.g., mass loaded vinyl behind the drywall or a sound isolation clip system. Also, consider addressing your doors first; they’ll leak more sound than your walls).

You’ll want to spread sound absorbing panels throughout the room to tame mids/highs and use bass traps in corners to control low-end build-up. Any absorption you add will help, but the more absorption, the better the performance.

For a drum booth, we often recommend a booth, if space allows it. If that’s not possible, add thick acoustic panels or bass traps around the drums to help control some of that low frequency sound from the kick and toms. Bass will also need more of that thick absorption as well.

If you are allowed to hang panels, that is going to help make the space sound much better. If you’re worried about sound leaking out and disrupting neighbors, you might want to consider asking the landlord if you can install a door seal kit on the room and soundproof window inserts over the windows to help be a good neighbor. There is some construction to the door and door jamb and window jamb respectively, so you’ll want to make sure that’s not a violation of the lease.

This is a high-level soundproofing measure that you would use if you need maximum isolation where you cannot have the music disturbing anyone outside the room. If that’s you, then you may need one. If you’re unsure if you need to go that far, give us a call to discuss your plans.