Skip to main content

Hi, all, I'm new here, and popping in to ask for some professional advice and may stick around if this forum hasn't been engulfed by the 16-year-old army that plagues so many forums :P . I record speed punk music, think: RKL, DRI, old NOFX, old Suicidal Tendencies, old Guttermouth, etc... I in now way, shape, or form consider myself to be a vocalist, but I can lay down decent snotty punk vox for my home recordings, and better to have decent vox than no vox, at least imho.

So, to get to the actual question: I'm having trouble getting the quieter parts to be as loud as the screamed parts. I already know how to properly handle a mic., and yes, I'm using and Audix OM5. What I want to know is, should I hit a compressor or limiter first (I'm using a two channel Maxcom for my physical compressor/limiter)? Also, how drastic should the compression be? Should I do a threshhold of -10 at 3 and use multiple Adobe 3.0 compressor plugins, staging the compression, or should I hit it hard with the physical compression? Thanks.

Topic Tags

Comments

anonymous Sun, 05/25/2008 - 01:14

Try em all and see what sounds good.

"I'm having trouble getting the quieter parts to be as loud as the screamed parts."

Compressing things will bring the parts together, although a little "fader riding" in the mix can help this too without affecting dynamic range.
In other words, turn the vocals up when you're whispering jack, and turn em down when you're shouting at the heavy petting zoo.

anonymous Mon, 05/26/2008 - 13:17

I would definitely hit your hardware compressor first and then compress again at mixdown. I try to use less compression at different stages instead of a lot of compression all at once, this makes the compression less noticable.
You could also try highlighting really soft passages and increasing the gain, so the signal is a little more consistant before it hits your software compressor.

I hope you stick around, people who have good thoughtful questions are pretty well recieved here (it's only the people who try to give answers who get slapped down occasionally!)

Good Luck

hueseph Mon, 05/26/2008 - 13:44

NCdan wrote: I'm having trouble getting the quieter parts to be as loud as the screamed parts.

What's wrong with having the quieter parts quieter than the loud parts. I think that's just a feature. I remember buying LPs and cranking them on first listen then when the loud parts hit, my mother would start yelling.

anonymous Mon, 05/26/2008 - 13:51

Thanks, MarkG, I figured out through trial and error (also known as "why is my mix pumping so much?") that using multiple stages of compression is a must for anything more than taming the peaks, but the real problem I have is that I'm not a vocalist; you might equate this post to a beginning guitarist who goes and buys a decent guitar rig, then goes on a forum and asks how to get _____ sound. Sure, he can follow all the suggestions, but chances are he'll still get it wrong. Now, if my concepts of compression and limiting are accurate, a compressor reduces the level of the audio signal to the degree you set, while a limiter says, "you aren't getting any louder than ____ amount." Is this correct? My pea brain seems to think that since I'm not going for beautiful vocals, that limiting before compressing will let me take digital compression stages out, not to mention using lower compression levels. Now, if it's the other way around (compress -> limiting), I have a dilemma because my analog unit is only two channels of compression or limiting (I can adjust the ratio to get a limiter). So, would going: analog compression -> analog limiting -> digital compression ___ times present a problem? Or am I just thinking too hard here? Thanks.

hueseph, there isn't anything wrong with the quiet parts being quieter, but the bass drum is pretty much slammed against the wall (on purpose), and I want a mix where every instrument is clearly audible, and so that means lower vocal volumes than you'll hear on most mainstream recordings. I guess this is exclusive to punk bands, as we seem to keep the vocals a lot lower than most other styles of music. So, keeping whispers and talking loud enough can be tough.

anonymous Mon, 05/26/2008 - 14:08

I think your undestanding of compression vs limiting is right on. If you want to use a combination of compression and limiting, I would use the limiter first to "tame" the signal, then use a compressor to get the "sound".
You will be hard pressed to get specific settings from people here, not because they don't want to give them to you, but because the settings will change based on the input signal, you will just have to use your ear for the most part.
I'm not real sure how to get the sound you want because my idea of punk is the Ramones and Sex Pistols, I'm assuming things have changed in the last 25 years!

anonymous Mon, 05/26/2008 - 15:55

Thanks again MarkG, it's good to know that at least one person thinks that limiting -> compression is a good idea. It's not specific settings I'm after so much, but general ballparks. I've always hit the analog unit hard, and then applied digital compression and limiting sparingly, because who's gonna argue that a good plugin is superior to a good analog unit? Although, I'm sure the plugins in Audition 3.0 are of excellent quality. I'm pretty sure I'm gonna have to apply more limiting and compression than is becoming of a professional vocalist, but then again, it's underground punk we're talking about here :roll: . I've noticed the Maxcom has a tendency to filter out around 12,000 Hz and up when I use harder settings, but that's what EQ's are for, right?

Now I'm wondering just how hard of a limiter I should run. -10? -20? -40? And then there's the one channel of analog compression I'd have left; is it typical for screeching vocals to have a high threshold, high ratio, or both? High threshhold would be like -30 and high ratio would be like 7 (at least in my mind this is high) (this is referring to the analog unit, as I can load like 13 digital compressor plugins on the vocal track if I wanted to 8) ). So, I will appreciate anyone with any input :D .

anonymous Sun, 06/01/2008 - 16:19

OK, now that compression and limiting has been covered, I'd like to get some tips on screaming vocals. It seems that 99% of the advice for recording vox is for people using condenser mics.... My first question is: do any of you engineers use those foam windscreens you put over the mic.? They seem help a lot with pops and all that stuff, but am I losing anything important? Also, just how far should I keep the mic. away from me avoid boominess? Since my vocals tend to cover everything from whispers to screeching, I have been putting my mouth on the mic for whispers and pulling away as I got louder, maybe up to 5" away; is this good technique, or should I try to stay even farther away from the mic.? Also, I can get a much better performance from myself when I hold the mic., but would I be that much better off using a stand? Feel free to add any other suggestions, as I need all the help I can get. Thanks.

anonymous Sun, 06/01/2008 - 17:25

For your style of vocal, I would say a dynamic mic with a foam windscreen would be just fine. I would not limit myself to using only condensers for vocals. The usual example is Tom Petty using a 57 on recordings (as well as live).

Seems like you really have a handle on your mic technique, I wouldn't change anything, except that you could probably pull away even further than 5", even a foot wouldn't hurt.
You just might want to keep in mind that as you pull the mic away you will lose a little low end (not necessarily a bad thing).

natural Sun, 06/01/2008 - 17:50

Compression-
First set the level that you want for the soft vox.
Set the threshold so that the softest bits barely trigger the compressor. (there's no need to compress the soft bits)
Next - Set the ratio so that the loud vox are at the correct level.
Ride the fader if needed in mixdown.

Performance-
A bit of a placebo, but you can hold a dummy mic and sing to that while the real mic is a few inches more away. This sometimes helps with performance.

MICs-
A condenser mic in OMNI mode will give you less bass bump. For cardiod mics your technique should be in the ballpark.

hueseph Sun, 06/01/2008 - 18:40

MarkG wrote: I would not limit myself to using only condensers for vocals. The usual example is Tom Petty using a 57 on recordings (as well as live).

Or Sennheiser 441s on "Stop Draggin' My Heart Around" with Stevie Nicks. Personally, I think condensers and screamo are a bad combination. It's a recipe for distortion and a blown capsule.

anonymous Sun, 06/01/2008 - 19:06

When I was looking for a vocal mic. everyone and their grandma was telling me to get a condenser, but I never saw any of the bands that influenced me use a condenser, so I went with the OM5 dynamic mic.; it was either that or an SM58, and since I always thought SM58's sounded bassy, I decided on the OM5. It's really a nice mic., and it's quite bright considering the extremely high gain before feedback it has.

BobRogers Mon, 06/02/2008 - 10:02

NCdan wrote: I know how to adjust the compressor, I just don't know which order things should go in and what general settings engineers typically use with screeching vocalists.

Second sentence contradicts the first. If you think there are "general settings engineers typically use with screeching vocalists" then you don't know how to adjust the compressor.

anonymous Mon, 06/02/2008 - 15:18

NCdan, I think most of us realize you simply wanted to move from the "compression" issue (since you feel like you have a handle on it) to the "mic selection and technique" stage.
I think the confusion lies in the fact that the heading of the post is still under "compression and limiting"

You just hijacked your own thread!!

BrianaW Mon, 06/02/2008 - 20:24

I know it's probably not very orthodox, but if I were in your situation and the phrasing were to allow it... I'd track the loud and quiet parts on separate tracks. Most old school stuff like the stuff you're talking about was recorded live on less than ideal equipment. Have you seen the Kennedy's "In God We Trust Inc." video? It shows them in the studio tracking the record with a bunch of crappy dynamic mics duct taped together and the entire band tracks live. Misfits did, Circle Jerks did, all of that stuff until Descendents maybe? And even then, bands like Jawbreaker still tracked live 10 years later. So I guess what I'm saying is if you're looking for that more raw sound like the early D.R.I. stuff, you probably want a dynamic. Whether it's a 57, 58, or the one you have is up to you. I played in a punk band for about 10 years and have recorded quite a few of them and I would probably never use a large diaphragm condenser. Small diaphragm maybe, but most likely a dynamic and I'd use it on a stand about 5 to 10 inches away with a windscreen. Mike Muir is probably using a small diaphragm condenser on the later stuff, but dynamic on the earlier stuff. They are definitely using dynamics for the gang vocals. And again, sounds like it was recorded live to me.

So my point is, If I personally wanted to get that sound (which I do sometimes), I wouldn't compress or limit anything until mixdown, and even then I'd use it sparingly. I'd do the 2 separate tracks for loud and soft before I'd compress Punk Rock vocals on the way in. I might even leave everything dry and just smash it on the master channel during mixdown. Power Pop is a totally different story tho... they smash the heck out of that. This of course, is really just a preference of mine and is to be taken with a grain of salt.

Has anyone ever tried using no compression and just drawing automations to control the gain? That might be interesting to try. Futile maybe, but interesting. :)