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The Compression Obsession

No other piece of gear elicits such passionate debate as the humble compressor. For while its effects often go unnoticed by the average music listener, musicians and music producers can't help but feel a strong affinity for the life, presence, and 'special sauce' a good compressor can breathe into a track. In this article we answer some of your questions, unpick common compression parameters, and look at the four basic types of compressor you'll encounter when making music. If you have questions about any topics discussed, contact our friendly customer support team for a chat.

What Is Audio Compression?

Simply put, audio compression takes an audio signal and makes the loudest parts quieter and the quiet parts louder. To say that in a slightly more technical way: it reduces the volume of your audio signal's peaks, while increasing the overall volume of the signal itself, thereby making the troughs (your breathing, the room ambience, or the buzz of a single coil pickup) louder.

By making the variance in volume of an audio signal smaller (AKA reducing the dynamic range), compression makes it easier to mix audio signals together. For example, compressing a vocal take can help it sit just in front of a backing guitar, whereas the raw recording may contain words which are inaudible or stand out as being too loud entirely.

Example of non-compressed vs compressed audio waveform

Compression Parameters

Compressors, be they hardware or software, can be tricky beasts. Their parameters produce subtle effects when dialled in conservatively, and they also tend to make your signal sound louder, which human ears instinctively judge as better. This can make achieving optimal settings difficult. We break down each parameter below.

Diagram showing compression threshold

Threshold

This is the dB value around which the compressor will engage. If you have the threshold set to -12dB, then the compressor watches for audio approaching that decibel level. You'd be forgiven for thinking anything below 0dB should be inaudible. Inside your DAW, you should always be below 0dB as this is the point at which audio will clip.

Diagram showing the effect of compression ratio on audio

Compression Ratio

The amount of attenuation applied to a signal as it attempts to pass the threshold. A 2:1 ratio means that for every 2dB that the signal would have gone above the threshold, it goes 1dB instead. Typical use cases could see anything up to an 8:1 ratio for strong compression. Anything above 20:1 is considered 'Limiting'.

Diagram explaining the compression knee

Knee

This defines the range over which the compressor changes from 1:1 to the ratio you've defined. A "Hard" knee switches quickly from a non-compressed state to a fully-compressed state at the threshold value. A "Soft" knee will gradually increase the compression level from a point before the threshold until a point after it.

Diagram showing compression attack

Attack Time

This is the time it takes for the signal to start compressing once it hits the range defined by the knee. This delay can be anything from 20 us (microseconds) to 100 ms (milliseconds). Most instruments benefit from attack times with just enough delay to let the initial burst of sound, the transient, through.

Diagram showing compression release

Release Time

This is how long it takes for the signal to return to an uncompressed state once it falls back into the range of the knee. These delays typically range from 40 ms to 4 or more seconds. Shorter release times avoid unduly compressing the next transient. Very short release times will create a noticeable 'pumping' effect.

When Should You Compress Audio?

The primary reason to compress audio is to reduce dynamic range. The less dynamic range an audio signal has, the easier it is to mix with other signals. Imagine a folk singer using emotive volume changes over a light acoustic guitar melody. Now imagine trying to do this over a punk band. It wouldn't matter what volume you set the vocals to, it would either be too soft or too loud. Compression solves this problem, and the singer in our aforementioned punk band helps by singing at more consistent volume levels while using rhythm and timbre to create interest.

Another way to use compression is as an effect. By flattening a signal's dynamics, extreme compression can make a sound 'two-dimensional'. Think about blues and jazz recordings from the first half of the 20th Century. They have a sepia, music-box quality to them that is a result of, amongst other things, limitations with recording media that meant everything was highly-compressed by default. By softening sharp attacks and increasing the volume of fading notes, high levels of compression can also give instruments like guitars a languid, singing quality with an almost infinite sustain.

Sidechaining is a form of compressor automation that is invaluable when mixing kick- and bass-heavy music. Instead of having the compressor watch the volume level of the track it's on, it watches the level of another track entirely. This makes one track react to another, having its volume reduced low whenever the guide track is high. Used mostly with a bass track watching a kick, it frees up overall volume and frequencies, allowing the kick to hit as hard as possible without becoming muddy. The 'pulse' of the bass changing form in syncopation to the kick is also a desirable effect that makes dance tracks really pump.

As mentioned above, limiting is an extreme form of compression that dramatically reduces a signal's volume once it hits the threshold. This effectively creates a 'hard ceiling' that a signal can't exceed. Limiting is useful on tracks that have strong peaks which push 0dB, as it can stop them from distorting -- though this is admittedly more of a band-aid than a desirable effect. More commonly, limiting is used on rough mixes or final masters to push the perceived volume of a track up to a certain level without clipping. Be careful though, even moderate limiting can crush transients and kill a track's 'vibe' very quickly.

Rackmount compressor

What Types of Audio Compression Are There?

There are four basic compressor types which respond in different ways to the signal they are fed. At the end of the day, they will all compress a signal, but some may do it faster, or with more 'colour' than others. Of course, these are broad categories. A single compression plugin may emulate beyond a typical compressor type's regular parameters, or recreate the sonic characteristics of multiple types. Through experimentation you'll quickly discover which compressors work with your style and tastes.

Arturia compressor plugin

VCA

VCA compressors are simple, reliable, and ubiquitous. A Voltage Controlled Amplifier is, as it sounds, an amplifier that increases or decreases its volume in response to control voltage. VCA compressors produce predictable, repeatable, and distortion-free results and typically sport every parameter you could ever wish for.

T-Racks compressor plugin

FET

FET compressors are a subset of VCA compressors which trade some of the cleanliness for an appealing 'colour'. Field Effect Transistors achieve this by responding not just to control voltage but to the whole electrical field. FET compressors tend to sound better on instruments than on masters but, as with anything subjective, it depends on how you use them.

Softtube compressor plugin

Optical

Optical compressors use resistors which react to light. Depending on the type of light and the material of the resistor, optical compressors can behave in vastly different ways. They all tend to have non-linear attack and response curves, however. This makes them sound 'smooth' or 'musical' and makes them well-suited to melodic lines and ringing chords.

Universal Audio compressor plugin

Tube

Tube compressors utilise vacuum tube, AKA valve, amplifiers in their final gain stage to increase the overall volume once the peaks have been attenuated. Tube amps create desirable harmonic distortion which is perfect for adding warmth to an instrument or track. Push tube compressors hard on drums and bass for wall-shaking thump.

Go Compress With the Best

As you can see, compression is an important, if sometimes misunderstood, part of any musician or music producer's setup. If you have further questions about compression, or need advice on the best compressor for your project, call or visit us in store to discover the settings and devices to perfectly polish your productions.

Ableton Live compressor GIF
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