Pqe Networth
About
Pqe Networth operates in the beat-driven side of the music world. Between counseling artists on advanced arrangements and mastering tracks for final release, the studio builds sonic identity. Engineers here run digital and analog rigs to shape everything from hip-hop demos to post-production cues for indie films. One room specializes in retro synth tones while another keeps a bank of vintage drum machines locked in for live session capture.
Those tracking down the space will find it in a mid-block unit on Flatbush Avenue, just off Cortelyou Road. 1216 Flatbush Avenue sits above a Korean bakery and around the corner from a 24-hour bodega—convenience without neon glare. Pre-production meetings often spill into the hallway lobby, where the hum of nearby traffic mixes with late-night keyboard warm-ups.
Musicians dial 347 758-1567 for bookings and technical questions alike. Bookings are capped at eight-hour sessions to keep turnaround tight, and after-hours lockouts happen on Sundays so the gear can cool under controlled humidity. Hardware maintenance logs are posted inside the rear entrance for anyone curious about calibration cycles.
Finding the spot is straightforward. Use the directions (https://www.google.com/maps/place?ftid=0x89c2599cc0955a29:0x1122b9687c101e83) to slide through the Cortelyou gate and park on the side street—no permit required after 6 p.m. The block feels like a rehearsal for Brooklyn’s next wave: guitar amps crackling from basement windows, spray-paint stencils peeling off roll-down gates, and the steady thump of a kick drum that drifts up from the subway grate behind the park.