"I wasn't refering to you steve " -
Sorry if I seem a little touchy on that one John, it's just that I've been refraining from setting both my neighbors' houses on fire with all residents inside for about 20 years now, sure wish it was socially acceptable to saute shitheads...
Eric, I'm not sure but I think you might be better off forgetting the rubber thing - for one thing, you'd need to glue everything together and if I'm not mistaken that would make your entire wall leaf revert to having only ONE coincidence dip, which would be at a fairly low frequency, which would go through the wall easier than non-resonant ones. I've talked to people who've used 3 different thicknesses of sheet rock on a leaf of a wall, with two thicker ones on the other side, with great success. (Drums not audible, period)
With glued wall layers, you lose isolation - with screwed ones, depending on your framing, you can also lose. It's kind of a tough call, for one thing I'm not interested in working in a studio with walls/ceilings that are ONLY glued, don't need things falling on me and don't want any one frequency range to bug me.
I don't know if you've read these two or not -
http://johnlsayers.com/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=598
http://www.domesticsoundproofing.co.uk/tloss.htm
Those two cover most of what I'm trying to say with no sleep in 32 hours... Steve