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Range compressing (was: AW: Mastering music)
>> I guess you're talking frequency bands here when saying "in
>> the middle of the dynamic range"?
On 14 apr 2007, at 13.49, Rainer Thelonius Balthasar Straschill wrote:
> No, I'm not. I'm talking "dynamic range" here, meaning:
>
> A normal compressor does the following. It completely "ignores"
> signals
> below a certain signal level (the threshold), signals passing above
> it will
> be subsequently attenuated by a certain factor (the ratio) - and this
> happens up all the way to 0dB.
>
> Another way to go is to have a range instead (say -30dB to -20dB),
> and if
> the signal is in that rage, it gets attenuated according to your
> factor (say
> e.g. 2:1). So a signal with -30dB goes through as -30dB, a signal
> with -20dB
> goes through as -25dB. So now comes the tricky part:
>
> If the signal goes beyond -20dB, it doesn't get compressed any
> further - so
> in this example a -5dB signal would come out at -10dB etc.
>
> This way, you compress dynamics in the midrange of the dynamic
> spectrum (the
> soft parts of your song, which often get lost under suboptimal
> listening
> conditions), while the dynamic transients in the loud parts (read:
> drums)
> get preserved.
Great explanation, Rainer! I see what you mean. Over here I have used
the software plug-in compressor Neodynum, from Elemental Audio, for
doing exactly that. Do you know about other compressing gear/software
that offer such a "range" setting?
Greetings from Sweden
Per Boysen
www.boysen.se (Swedish)
www.looproom.com (international)
http://tinyurl.com/fauvm (podcast)
http://tinyurl.com/2kek7h (CC donationware music releases)