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What Everyone Should Know About Compression – # 8 of 100

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The music production subject I’m asked most about is compression.

So here’s my number one piece of advice:

Stop using it.

Well at least stop compressing absolutely everything, it’s sucking the life out of your music.

Compression 101

Here’s Wikipedia on compression:

“In simple terms, a compressor is an automatic volume control. Using downward compression, loud sounds over a certain threshold are reduced in level while quiet sounds remain untreated. Upward compression involves making sounds below the threshold louder while the louder passages remain unchanged. Both reduce the dynamic range of an audio signal. This may be done for aesthetic reasons or to deal with technical limitations of audio equipment, which is seldom able to cope with the dynamic range the human ear can tolerate.”

So put even more simply:

  1. dynamic range refers to the difference between the loud and the soft bits
  2. compressors make the loud bits softer and the soft bits louder
  3. compressors reduce the dynamic range of whatever they are applied to

The secret no one tells you

Strictly speaking, if you mainly produce music in a computer (and at the time of writing most reading this will), you don’t need to use a compressor in most situations.

This is because the dynamic range of a VST plugin isn’t anywhere near as great as a vocalist or live instrument.

Plus you can control the volume of a programmed part in a myriad of other ways before you should reach for a compressor.

Dynamics = life

But doesn’t putting something through a compressor make it more powerful?

Well, for various complicated scientific reasons to do with the way the human ear perceives sound, it may appear to be louder, but whether it’s more powerful is debatable, especially if you’re compressing everything.

Dynamics give your music life. Differences in volume will make your music more subtle, expressive, and ultimately stand out. Isn’t that “more powerful”?

When to use compression

I’m not anti-compression persay. I’m just anti- “compressing everything at mixdown to within an inch of it’s life just because you think you should or because everyone else does”.

Compressors are a very necessary and useful tool in music production. But they are also the tool which is most overused and misunderstood.

But here’s some situations where you should consider getting your compressor out (or more likely loading it up).

1.* Live or analogue parts.*
If you’ve got a vocalist, live instrument or an analogue synths in a track, a compressor is often essential. Create contrast between compressed and uncompressed parts. Heavily compress a part or parts to make them stand out from the rest of the track which isn’t.
2. Sound design.
A compressor can be a useful tool for sculpting a sound.
Side-chain compression. Where you set the compressor to affect a part (like a pad), and another part (like a kick) determines when the compressor kicks in. This is how you get that (all too) popular “sucking” sound. It’s also often used to make vocals stand out without having to turn them up.
3. Parallel compression.
Where you send various parts to a compressor (usually at a high setting) and feed the resulting signal back into the mix. I often use this technique as you tend to get a much more “transparent” (ie you don’t notice it so much) result.

So before you reach for that compressor just think about it.

You might be using samples that are already compressed. The VST plugins you’re using may have compressors built in. When you master your track it will be compressed again. And if you get your music onto radio or in a club it will be compressed yet again.

So if you over-compress everything at mixdown stage too it’s going to sound awful.

Ok that’s my rant over. Just promise me you’ll stop it. 🙂

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Filed Under: Featured Post Tagged With: compression, compressor, sound engineering, vst compressor, vst plugins

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