
I'm a Scottish mixer / producer / musician with a proclivity for 'controlled madness'. I've mostly worked as arranger / producer / mixer for soul artist Becky Sikasa, and tend towards artists who are keen to craft their own spin on their genre.
To me, working on music is like cooking; a core ingredient, side flavours, a bunch of complimentary spices - aiming for a track to end up like a little meal for your ears. Warm, interesting, refreshing, leaves you satisfied!
I prefer to not think about limitations too much, so whilst there are some vague guide prices listed I'd rather be flexible and work out what's best for the project, so just get in touch!
Contact me through the green button above and let's get to work.
Languages
- English
Interview with D. Scobie
Q: What do you like most about your job?
A: Mostly the satisfaction of helping someone realise their creative goal!
Q: What's the biggest misconception about what you do?
A: That mixing can fix or hide a bad song! It can certainly provide some camouflage, but ultimately for a track to really be good the core song should be good.
Q: How would you describe your style?
A: Warm, vibrant, a little out-of-the-box.
Q: Which artist would you like to work with and why?
A: Remi Wolf. She definitely has some wild ideas in her music and I would love to cook up something crazy with her.
Q: Can you share one music production tip?
A: The age-old 'if it sounds good, it is good'. I think it's the most important rule in music!
Q: What type of music do you usually work on?
A: Mostly in the funk-pop / soul-pop region, but venturing into other adjacent styles on occasion

I was the Arranger, Producer, Mixer in this production
- Mixing EngineerAverage price - $350 per song
- Vocal TuningAverage price - $50 per track
- EditingAverage price - $50 per track
- PercussionAverage price - $100 per song
- Electric GuitarAverage price - $100 per song
Guide price is based on unlimited tracks with 5 revisions. I prefer to receive 3-5 reference mixes too!
Turn-around is fairly project-dependent, but usually the first mix within 72 hours or so.