O
Orchestrator1
New member
Does a compressor alter the tonal quality of an instrument after compression.
Rex.
Rex.
The short answer is YEP.
Another longer answer is YES, EVERY compressor potentially changes to tonal quality of an instrument, not mainly through the act of coloration (distortion above and beyond the pure compression itself), but rather by the pure act of compression itself.
G.
I'm using the term distortion in it's pure sense: any difference in the output from the input - any change in the signal - is a distortion of the original signal. The only question is to whether any given difference is intended or incidental. The coloration caused by circuit design is a form of incidental distortion; pushing that circuit out of equilibrium is a form of intended distortion.I agree with you, but i have to say that coloration goes beyond distortion, coloration depends on the type of electronic components used, design, etc..
Your diagrams are perhaps just a bit - unintentionally - misleading because they are showing what I assume is intended to be a sine wave of a specific frequency. Applicable, perhaps, to an analog synth voicing a single oscillator or some other instrument that is a source of a pure tone.
I think we've all experienced a situation where something sounded "good" - say a 2mix buss, for example - but when we needed to reign in it's dynamics a bit with a compressor what came out the other end sounded honk-ish or harsh or some other unpleasant adjective, because we inadvertantly adjusted the tonal balance to unintentionally emphasize some of the more unpleasant formants that were at relative low levels before we compressed. This has nothing to do with the "coloration" of the compressor itself, but rather just that the act of compression itself exposed the previously low-level some blemishes in the sound.
Yes, you are right i also think the same way... ++++1 on that oneedit - and it's the #1 reason I use a compressor. Automation is so much better at gain control........
Sometimes more, sometimes less. Depends. What instrument? What compressor? What settings? How much gain reduction? Does it sound to you like the tone quality changes?Does a compressor alter the tonal quality of an instrument after compression.
Rex.
Glenn:
What happens to the frequencies?
Well, yes and no on both counts. You're saying the right thing, if I read you right, but the above statement is a bit contradictory.NOTHING happens to the frequencies, it's all about amplitude
Sure, the fundamental frequency of the sine remains the same, but the harmonic content does change.
However, the strict OP question of whether compression changes the tonal balance of an instrument, has a strict and definitive answer of "yes, it does", regardless of any further coloration.
G.
Am I on the right track?
suprstar,
If I'm understanding Glenn and NL5's discourse, then that's technically correct, but in a practical sense the harmonic frequencies will end up amplified.
OK, more graphs! (below). In the input signal, I have big dynamic range that is full of my dominant frequency, right? And somewhere below that I have all my harmonic frequencies. Then I clamp on a compressor, and the signal changes to "compressor output". My dynamic range is reduced, and I'm going to end up amplifying the signal. As I think I understand it now, the harmonic frequencies that were once buried are now right up there with my somewhat flattened dominant frequencies. The frequencies haven't changed, but the balance between dominant and harmonic has changed. Am I on the right track?