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I was wondering what is done to a dry track before routing it to an aux? compression and eq? for what instruments are best with hard compression and whats best for soft compression?

Comments

hueseph Wed, 04/20/2011 - 11:26

It all depends. Sometimes you don't need compression or eq. Sometimes you want to compress the effect but usually only for a specific effect..it alldepends on what you want to hear. There is no hard and fast rule. Usually you want to compress or eq the entire signal but there is no hard and fast rule. You have to know what you are trying to achieve. That is the only way to decide what will be the most effective tool to use and how.

natural Wed, 04/20/2011 - 14:29

Compression is used to control dynamics. If your track doesn't have a lot of dynamics, then there's no need for compression.
Ex:
Organ- especially if it's sustained notes.
Strings - here I mean synth or sampled strings typically used in pop music
Bagpipes- Not too common, and although they're loud as hell, you probably won't need to compress them.
That should give you the general idea.

danielb Wed, 04/20/2011 - 22:21

thanks.i understand. but doesnt it sound like that most pop and modern rock type of songs are all compressed...i still like to compress a dry track softly and compress the wet track differently. i guess as a student in the "game". im just wondering what is other mixing techniques out there besides me doing ny compression on all my tracks?? thanks for all your input i appreciate it.