Hi y'all,
I've finally got around to tooling up on Compression.
(yes, it's taken a while)
I think I get the gist of it. -a question:
if we do a piece that has say 10 tracks.
do we apply compression to each track.
the track (or two) that is maybe causing us to hit the 'ceiling'.
Or do we do it at the end and apply it to the final wave file.
not sure how I would do that in Studio one, there is 'the project room', where you can do final mastering, (haven't quite worked that one out yet).
my apologies if it's a dumb question.
Shaun S
Compression
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- cosmicdolphin
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Re: Compression
Yes . No. Maybe. It depends.
All resposnes are contextual
All resposnes are contextual
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Re: Compression
Ok,Telefunkin wrote: ↑Sun Jun 09, 2024 8:06 amMy answer to all those options is ... it depends. I believe that its best to use all audio tools with intention, and not simply throw on a compressor just because you can. Knowing what you want to achieve, and knowing how to get that result is the ultimate aim. Saying that probably doesn't help you much right now though, so my suggestion would be to visit mastering.com where is a LOT of free course content and its really good.
https://courses.mastering.com/courses
If you sign up you can access their occasional sessions where over about 3 days they take you through the whole process from importing recorded tracks to turning out a finished song. You can watch the previously recorded sessions too, and they cover various styles. Each one also includes short sections on various mixing/mastering principles, so you get a fair amount of education each time. If that's too much and you just want to cover compression though, there's a free 10-hour free course on that topic alone. Ultimately, they'd like people to sign up to their Reverse Engineer program (quite costly), but you don't have to and the free stuff alone is well worth going through. I think it would help answer some or all of your questions.
Best of luck.
I get the drift, it depends on what you are trying to achieve.
- BradleyHagen
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Re: Compression
I signed up for The Reverse Engineer course today....it looks amazing! There are two or three TAXI members in there that I know of so far..... Whatever it takes!!Telefunkin wrote: ↑Sun Jun 09, 2024 8:06 amMy answer to all those options is ... it depends. I believe that its best to use all audio tools with intention, and not simply throw on a compressor just because you can. Knowing what you want to achieve, and knowing how to get that result is the ultimate aim. Saying that probably doesn't help you much right now though, so my suggestion would be to visit mastering.com where is a LOT of free course content and its really good.
https://courses.mastering.com/courses
If you sign up you can access their occasional sessions where over about 3 days they take you through the whole process from importing recorded tracks to turning out a finished song. You can watch the previously recorded sessions too, and they cover various styles. Each one also includes short sections on various mixing/mastering principles, so you get a fair amount of education each time. If that's too much and you just want to cover compression though, there's a free 10-hour free course on that topic alone. Ultimately, they'd like people to sign up to their Reverse Engineer program (quite costly), but you don't have to and the free stuff alone is well worth going through. I think it would help answer some or all of your questions.
Best of luck.
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