Postby nomsgmusic » Mon Jun 27, 2011 10:50 am
When I bought my house, I was in a similar position (yes, a full time working musician who owns a house.) My drum room is in a basement below the living room (like yours.) Now, it is not "entirely" sound proof, but my wife can watch TV or nap in the living room while I am practicing downstairs. A band can practice, or I can teach, or practice, in the room without being heard AT ALL outside.
Professional sound proofing is a science, and I agree with all of that has been said here. It can be COSTLY, and when done (without a budget,) CORRECTLY, (watching your gaps and seams, dealing with ventilation, acoustic suspension, room inside a room, etc) does and can work VERY well.
But those budgets were not available to me. So here's what I did, I put 2 layers of R-16 insulation (compressed,) above a drop ceiling, I treated the walls with foam and fibergalss to deaden the room up a bit, I put a layer of Homosote (google it) inside against the outside windows, with 4 layers of insulation in the window cutout, with another layer of Homosote over the inside of the window cutout (through the foundation in the basement) which I sealed with foam between the Homosote and the wall. I then hung blackout curtains on 2 of the walls (to make it look nice as well as a little bit of high end absorption.)
So like I said, it's NOT sound proof, but VERY sound resistant! The neighbors can hear absolutely NOTHING, (I stood right outside my window while a band bashed downstairs, and there was such a slight leakage, that when a car went by on the street out front it drowned out the ever so slight leakage!!! In fact it was almost inaudible, so the very little that you could hear is totally INCONSEQUENTIAL! And the family can "deal" with the very low roar inside the house. All in all, probably about a grand, and all done DIY.
Hope this helps,
Mark
[url][/url]bluejayrecords.com/drumatic
[url][/url]vicfirth.com/artists/mark_griffith.html