The $68,000 Alvarez House — Rare Earnings in a Silent Music Studio

The Alvarez house, worth about $68,000, hides its quiet routine in a small room converted into a recording studio. Here, late-night sessions once filled the space with sound. Now only a small metal box marked earnings remains beside the recording desk.
Diego Alvarez, Independent Music Producer
Diego Alvarez, born 1991 in Monterrey, produced music for local singers and online clients. Eight traces reveal his routine: a MIDI keyboard resting beneath the desk; a pair of studio headphones; a spiral notebook listing recording times; a microphone cable coiled neatly; a stack of demo CDs labeled by artist names; a small speaker monitor tilted toward the desk; a calendar pinned with studio bookings; and the metal box labeled earnings used to collect cash payments.
Most evenings he worked alone in the studio adjusting sound levels and mixing tracks. Payments from local artists were placed into the box before being logged into the notebook.
Sessions Stopped
A nearby apartment building complained about the late-night noise, forcing several cancellations. Recording sessions became less frequent. The studio calendar shows several dates crossed out before the bookings stop entirely.
Back in the studio, the metal box labeled earnings remains on the shelf beside the desk.
The house stands quiet and modest, its small recording room frozen in silence, the rare earnings waiting where the final track was once mixed.