Skip to main content

So if a vocalist has good control over his or her dynamics is compression necessary?

If you increase the gain slightly and pull the vocalist a little bit back from the mic can you dispose of the pop filter?

If a tree falls in the woods... nevermind.

L

Comments

bent Mon, 11/12/2007 - 22:04

Compression compresses (hehe) sound into a tighter, easier to use package. The voice can be controlled fairly well by the right person, but nothing is as quick as an and / or / nor / xnor digital gate on a silicon chip, which - truth be told - is what most of us rely on nowadays...

Compressors have the ability to take a millisecond peak and bring it down to match the signal immediately before and after, especially all those cool comp. and brickwall plugins in your window / mac box.

In the grand scheme of the electronic things, this helps us concentrate on the mix and ride the faders a little less.

I wouldn't forego the pop filter, nor would I have the singer stand away from the mic, unless I wanted some room ambience, or if the cat was gonna scream like bloody murder (at which point I would re-gain the mic and send that to a separate track altogether).

TVPostSound Mon, 11/12/2007 - 22:10

So if a vocalist has good control over his or her dynamics is compression necessary?

Are you talking tracking or mixing??

Tracking:
If you can get the level you need without hitting the red, then don't use it.
If not , then use the minimum amount needed to control the dynamics.

Mixing:
I was taught to mix without compression. If I have a problem getting voice to sit right in the mix, then I reach for a compressor.

Only use a compressor whenyou really need it.
Too many people out ther saying, yeah use a compressor on everything, makes the mix tight, wrong, it just makes mud.

bent Mon, 11/12/2007 - 22:14

Are you talking tracking or mixing??

Sorry, TV's right, don't put comps or gates to tape (or disc as the case may be).

You always want the pristine untouched sound available for future remixes.

But, you're gonna put comps on the mix, oh yes!

And, you're probably gonna have too much "ssssssssssibilance" in that vocal so you're also gonna put a de-esser on it as well.

And the ME is gonna push it all through some brickwall limiter at some point (there is a Loudness War going on, don't ya know)!

That's a fact, jack!

anonymous Mon, 11/12/2007 - 22:16

Re: Let me get one thing straight (legit question[s])...

MediaMurder wrote: if a vocalist has good control over his or her dynamics is compression necessary?

Compression is never necessary. Some make their living by avoiding it altogether. For a typical vocal performance, though, good dynamic control often goes hand-in-hand with relative placement to the microphone, and moving back even 6" in sections can have a dramatic effect on tone thanks to room ambience and proximity effect. It's generally not a problem, as the ear expects these phenomena, but if a.) the room has errant acoustic problems or b.) a vocalist's sound is largely dependent on eating the microphone, static placement with moderate compression may be the best option.

MediaMurder wrote: ...can you dispose of the pop filter?

Some claim you can, but moving the vocalist back but on-axis with the mic' is not very effective. I see a lot of recordists today suspend a microphone above a vocalist with the diaphragm around nose level and angled downward toward the mouth without using a filter.

anonymous Mon, 11/12/2007 - 22:25

bent wrote: You always want the pristine untouched sound available for future remixes.

Respectfully: if you are recording tracks with a slight chance someone may later mix them, recording with a compression setting you envision (enauralize?) for the project is more favorable than chancing that a future mixer will get it close. Also, if I'm ever in a setting where I have access to a megabucks outboard compressor, you'd better believe I'll print with it rather than mixing at home with...Sony DX track compressor.

bent Mon, 11/12/2007 - 22:40

I appreciate that, but I still wouldn't do it.

You never know when the next new pristine piece of gear is gonna hit the shelves, and then you're gonna sit around saying "why the hell did I commit that POS DBX 166 to that track when I could have used our brand new (your new favorite current brand inserted here)?"

drstudio Mon, 12/24/2007 - 14:46

I used to think this way about compression, but these days, I track sometimes through two comps. It may just be the type of music I'm doing, but I love the sound.
I'll use one comp with low ratio of like 3:1 fast attack, medium to slow release compressing no mer then 3db reduction, than go through a heavier comp (distressor, or 1176) at a harder ratio 8 or 10:1 slower attack just to grab the peaks. Call me Crazy!!!