AI_IMAGE: A country musician in a flannel shirt and worn cowboy hat sitting on a wooden stool inside a warm-toned recording studio, leaning into a large diaphragm condenser microphone with an acoustic guitar on his knee, soft amber overhead lighting, sound baffles and analog mixing console visible in the background, cables coiled on the hardwood floor, intimate behind-the-scenes documentary atmosphere | photorealistic cinematic | landscape

Studio Sessions — Spring 2025

Date:

2025-04-08

Photographer:

Elise Moreno

Location:

Blackbird Studio, Nashville, TN


Ten days inside Blackbird Studio with the amps cranked low and the coffee pot running hot — Elise Moreno documented every late-night vocal take, every torn-up lyric sheet, and every argument about the snare sound for album two.

The band booked Studio A for its live room: a converted church with sixteen-foot ceilings and a Neve console older than any of them. Producer Dale Whitmore wanted the whole outfit tracking together — no click, no headphones, just four guys in a circle watching each other’s hands the way they do on stage. Elise moved through the room like a ghost, shooting from the control-room glass, from behind the drum riser, from the floor looking up at the fretboard.


Tracking Days

The tracking photos carry the weight of repetition — the same four bars played twenty times until the groove locked. Travis swapping guitars between takes. Hank marking bowing patterns on masking tape stuck to the upright’s fingerboard. Drummer Billy Ray Scofield taping a towel over the snare at 2 a.m. because the neighbors called twice. Every small decision shows up in the final record, but here you can see them being made in real time.

AI_IMAGE: Overhead view of a vintage analog mixing console in a dimly lit recording studio, hands adjusting faders, warm amber desk lamp casting a pool of light on handwritten notes and a half-empty coffee mug, cables and patch bays visible, shallow depth of field with bokeh from LED indicators on the board | photorealistic cinematic | landscape
Dale Whitmore at the Neve — riding the faders on a live take of “Gravel and Grace.”

After Hours

The best frames came after midnight. Cody alone in the vocal booth with the lights down, singing into a ribbon mic that cost more than his truck. Travis sitting cross-legged on the control-room couch rewriting a bridge lyric on the back of a pizza box. The hallway littered with empty cans and crumpled chord charts — the debris of a record being born the hard way.

I’ve photographed sessions in rooms ten times this size. But these four played like the walls were made of people, not plaster. That energy is hard to fake and impossible to miss through a lens.

Elise Moreno, photographer

Full gallery available in the album liner notes when the record drops this fall.


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