Main vs. sub panel for dedicated lines


I am building a second home on my property. Will have a dedicated audio room. I will be routing 2 or 3 dedicated lines for my audio system. The high current devices for the home will be run off the main panel. I will install a sub panel supplied by the main to accommodate power for 2 bedrooms and a 1/2 bathroom.  

Question, should I run my dedicated lines off the main or the sub panel? I could move some of the high current devices to the sub panel if needed.

Thanks in advance for advice. 
mesch
Riley, thanks for the link. 

MC, the sub panel is run off the main by a dedicated 240 2-phase line. If I have 3 lines run back to either the sub or main panel each tied to it's own breaker then I have 3 dedicated lines to my system do I not?
I am unclear as to what you are doing with this second home. If it really is a second home it would have its own service and panel. If you are running it off of your main panel then yes it would be a sub panel situation. If the listening room is in this second building then you would run the ONE dedicated listening room line to this sub panel.

Main thing is there be one dedicated line, and everything in the system uses this one line. All the lights and other outlets for accessories, you can run as many lines as you want for those. The system however, it all goes on one line.

The relevant comment from Michael Fremer starts at 15:50  https://youtu.be/H07NpWk_Xf8?t=950
Different philosophies regarding dedicated lines. Use one line if all your component’s amperage is less than the 20A breaker. The takeaway is no ground loop.
Use more than one line if separating digital and analogue, running high current monoblocks, or running subs. Lighting should be moved to other panel. Certain lights and dimmers will cause hum to audio system.

These circuits should be wired into the same leg (phase) in the service panel. In your current situation, dedicated lines should be run from the panel without the high-current devices. Although both panels will share hot, neutral and ground, the breakers are further away from the appliances that generate noise on the mains.

Two ground rods need to be drilled into mother earth according to your local code. The electrician will know this.



@noromance
8 gauge Romex will not fit 20A receptacle.

4 gang box is good idea if using one line.