Compression Settings
Compression Settings
I'm looking for a list of general compression settings to use for different types of instruments. Can anyone help?
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- mnml maxi
- Posts: 1150
- Joined: Wed Jun 06, 2007 8:23 pm
Do you understand what compression is? For example, do you understand what the ratio does or what the attack / release do?
Essentially compression is a linear transformation of the signal, with possibly some enveloping. Learn about what compression does, the nuts and bolts and then maybe try different settings to see how they affect your spectrums. To be honest, I try to be cautious and light with the compression because it screws your timbre. Take a look at presets on compressor plugins and then maybe experiment with sending instruments through compression one at a time, find what you like. Compression settings are a very personal thing and I feel like they set your sound apart from other producers' sound, so go with that and find your notch.
Essentially compression is a linear transformation of the signal, with possibly some enveloping. Learn about what compression does, the nuts and bolts and then maybe try different settings to see how they affect your spectrums. To be honest, I try to be cautious and light with the compression because it screws your timbre. Take a look at presets on compressor plugins and then maybe experiment with sending instruments through compression one at a time, find what you like. Compression settings are a very personal thing and I feel like they set your sound apart from other producers' sound, so go with that and find your notch.
_Mark
Re: Compression Settings
there's isn't a general setting really. factory settings are only a pointer on how the compression should be applied to a certain instrument, but it's not strict.dazza wrote:I'm looking for a list of general compression settings to use for different types of instruments. Can anyone help?
i sudgest you give this read a try:
Guide To Compression and Limiting
Drop the idea of becoming someone else, because you are already a masterpiece.
maybe you don't like my suggestion :
Learning by doing is the best way!
If you use the compressor the wrong way, it can destroy your whole track/channels/samples/whatever!
Reading manuals and watching tutorials is okay, but you have to find out,
which knob/fader has which effect ! You know ??
Greetz
Ben
Learning by doing is the best way!
If you use the compressor the wrong way, it can destroy your whole track/channels/samples/whatever!
Reading manuals and watching tutorials is okay, but you have to find out,
which knob/fader has which effect ! You know ??
Greetz
Ben
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- mnml maxi
- Posts: 1208
- Joined: Thu Jun 14, 2007 7:15 am
- Location: Arizona USA
I agree turn the knobs and figure out what sounds good. I bout a couple books on mixing and mastering music and both of those had great sections on how a compressor effects different sounds. Those books run about 50 bucks though.Kilevox wrote:maybe you don't like my suggestion :
Learning by doing is the best way!
If you use the compressor the wrong way, it can destroy your whole track/channels/samples/whatever!
Reading manuals and watching tutorials is okay, but you have to find out,
which knob/fader has which effect ! You know ??
Greetz
Ben
There aren't any hard and fast rules... and there are different directions... From the highly polished clean production style to the grungy pumpy Daft Punk style... Daft Punk is known for using rather cheap hardware compressors. You can't say one way is right and all others are wrong...
Subtle compression is usually the best in my opinion... especially if it's software... Different compressors also give different colors...
I really like the UAD Fairchild, but I also use the MClass Compressor in Reason quite a bit.
I think this is a great (and cheap) intro to compression:
http://www.dogsonacid.com/showthread.ph ... did=507671
Subtle compression is usually the best in my opinion... especially if it's software... Different compressors also give different colors...
I really like the UAD Fairchild, but I also use the MClass Compressor in Reason quite a bit.
I think this is a great (and cheap) intro to compression:
http://www.dogsonacid.com/showthread.ph ... did=507671
Re: Compression Settings
Just what i'm looking for. Thanks.plaster wrote:there's isn't a general setting really. factory settings are only a pointer on how the compression should be applied to a certain instrument, but it's not strict.dazza wrote:I'm looking for a list of general compression settings to use for different types of instruments. Can anyone help?
i sudgest you give this read a try:
Guide To Compression and Limiting