Compression Settings Help.
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trancenrg69 |
I was wondering what compression settings you guys use for various sounds. For example kicks, pads, lead synths. I know every sound is different, but i'm sure there are guidlines to follow for specific sounds. I was tring to tweak a pad before and I wanted it too be really phat but it ended up having to much low end and it distorted alot. Can this be fixed with compression or eq? |
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TraNcerke |
distortion : your sound is too loud, decrease volume
too much low end : eq away some low end
i really cant see the point of using a compressor on a regular pad..
use unison and fine tuning and filters & efx and stuff to fatten it up
use it to make your percussion more snappier.
use it to decrease the peaks and increase the quiet moments in a line.
and as with about everything in producing training is the key, experience with settings there's no such a think like a predefined setting for a particular sound... cause 2 different kicks will prolly need 2 different settings
hope this helps ;) |
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Chris Creator |
Yeah dude there's no real point using a compressor on a pad, Your better off just eqing and or filtering it. As for kicks and percussion set the ratio to about 6:1 and have a short attack and release times so they snap. And as for synths its the same as pads no use for it.
But just experiment you will work it out. |
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TranceInMySoul |
Well, I gotta disagree with these answers - compressing a pad can make a good difference! It all depends on the pad :-) If, for example, your pad starts very quiet with low low-pass filter cutoff, and opens up slowly to reveal a massive sound, the early part of the pad will probably be too quiet in the mix if you don't compress the whole sound.
And that's the point of compression - if the difference between the loudest part of a sound and the quietest part is too much you need to add compression to reduce the dynamic range. Don't follow the rules, follow your ears :-) |
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