P
pappy999
New member
I was thinking about putting some compression on the snare and kick drum during my next tracking session to try to even out hits a little. Is this a common practice?
Fletcher said:Two things you might want to think about that might change your perspective on recording in general... the first is that a recording studio is an instrument that takes years to learn to play [like any other instrument takes years to learn to play]; the second is that like any other instrument; once you know how to do something it doesn't mean you should necessarily do it. You know you're an engineer when you know what all the knobs do but can make really good product by touching as few of them as humanly possible.
Best of luck with it.
Scottgman said:So am I a total idiot for compressing on the way in? I'll compress the overheads and the kick/snare. I'm talking 6:1, fast attack, medium release, but I set the threshold so that it only compresses the wild hits.
My thinking is that I don't want to dick around with trying to "fix" a clipped snare hit in the overheads (or whatever) after the fact-- or have to re-track what was an otherwise stellar performance because of some distorted drum hits. So I guess I'm using the compressors more as a safety net than as an "effect."
I dunno, I use an RNLA on the overheads and RNCs on the snare/kick. I really like the way it sounds. Also, I'm always recording the same drummer in the same room on the same kit and using the same mics/pres and have been tracking this way for a while. So I'm pretty familiar with the equipment and the results I'm getting. The drummer and I have done alot of experimenting and dialed in this sound. I suppose I would approach it differently if I was recording a different drummer/kit every time.
But what the hell do I know? I'm just a novice.
Point taken. But I don't push the gain-- at least I don't think I do. I try to keep everything away from the red and I would say the average hit is around -12db. My overheads are probably even lower than that. However, sometimes a wild hit will clip and sound like ass and the overheads seem especially prone to this. But I'm talking 2 hits per song might clip. So I'd rather use compressors on the way in to avoid those two hits that will cause me an ulcer down the road.giraffe said:what's that quote bruce used to have in his sig?
i think it went
there is no prize for being as close to zero as possible. people will not like you better, and girls will not be more attracted to you.
something like that anyway......
Scottgman said:Point taken. But I don't push the gain-- at least I don't think I do. I try to keep everything away from the red and I would say the average hit is around -12db. My overheads are probably even lower than that. However, sometimes a wild hit will clip and sound like ass and the overheads seem especially prone to this. But I'm talking 2 hits per song might clip. So I'd rather use compressors on the way in to avoid those two hits that will cause me an ulcer down the road.
Maybe I'm compensating for my poor engineering skills or maybe my drummer needs to work on his control, but it's been working for me and I like the results. Of course, I've never tracked in a really nice room with an array of APIs and Neves at my disposal. I'm using RNP and Toft level gear here. So, again... what do I know??![]()
This is my band's situation, and we compress during recording (just the snare). Our music tends to span a pretty wide dynamic range, so for us to keep things even I find it necessary to compress. We have a good drummer now--very even--so this works well. When I was drumming (out of sheer necessity), I had to compress to handle the inconsistencies in my playing; not good.Kronpox said:Unless you're able to record the drum tracks onto separate tracks for each part of the kit, then post-recording compression will not give you your desired effect, as it would compress the entire kit with the same settings. So if this is what you're stuck with, then compress during recording, but spend a while making sure it sounds good as a kit.
This is another thing for us. We have only 1 RNC. I am going to purchase another when I can, but for now I tend to lightly compress a number of things during recording so I can free up the RNC for use during mixdown if need be.giraffe said:also, like i said it makes a little more sense with hardware because it frees them up to do other things later.