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And how do you use it? What general settings do you like..what styles of music call for different settings...etc etc...lets hear what you use folks
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Ang1970 Sun, 11/04/2001 - 22:26

My most used is McDSP compressor bank. Usually sounds good enuf, nicely incorporates some eq bands, and saves bundles on DSP. Very economical.

If that doesn't work, then what I use depends on the sound and the desired effect. Could be BombFactory, Waves, TC, etc. Even sansamp, ampfarm, L1, lo-fi, duy tape, etc, might give the desired squish. It always depends.

Least used / least fav: Digirack

anonymous Mon, 11/05/2001 - 09:16

I have two surefire compressors that I really like.. When tracking, I'll usually tame things that need it with an RNC. Mixing (digital) will run through a Renaissance compressor more often than not. I tend to shy away from Waves' C1 and others; if I need a 'cheap' compressor during mixes I'll just default to the built-in Cubase dynamics processor: it's easier on my processor than just another mid-range soft-compressor. Usually I'll bounce it down with a Ren. compressor, anyway, however.

The renaissance compressor seems to get a little squirrly when you start to push it input gain up past 14dB or so; I've often had to compress the vocals twice to get them to a workable volume. I *do* find the C1 compressor or Cubase dynamics to be a little bit better when I just need to pump up the volume on something.

The bass tracks I've worked with all seem to do really well with a ratio between 2.5:1 & 4.0:1 and around a 4-6dB boost. The threshold I use simply depends on the song: I'll work it 'till it's tame enough, but I leave as much room as possible. I tend to use RenComp's Optocompressor / Smooth on bass.

Vocals really varies. I've used about every setting under the sun, for the same style of music, depending on the song.

I like the optocompressor / smooth settings, when I can get away with'em. Screaming rock vocals tend to do better with a electro / warm compressor, of course.

Drums I tend not to compress too much...most of my drums get recorded with 3-4 mics and recorded down to a single stereo channel. They'll often get an electro/smooth setting, with a 2-6dB increase, and enough of a threshold to tame them. The drummers I've worked with will 'make me' tweak the drums until they're just about screaming in agony if I don't comp them to a stereo channel ASAP.

I haven't mentioned the attack/release times yet...they usually work well on default. If it just...doesn't sound right...I'll lower the settings (starting with the attack) until I like the way the little meter moves. How scientific is THAT? Nah, sometimes (mostly with drums or loooong vocal sounds) I'll give it a fair amount of judgement.