Hi! Just a quick question. In some of my recording books, everyone seems to have a different opinion about when to use compression. Some say to use it in real time while you record so you don't have to screw around with each track later on for balances. Others say to save it until mixdown and add compression where it's needed. Yet others say wait until you master your final songs for an "overall balance" and to jack up the final volume for each song. Any adevice??
Thanks! Mike Freze
Let's set aside the idea of leaving compression to the mastering engineer for a moment, and start with the compression during recording v. mixdown.
As you've pointed out, there are two basic schools of thought on this. Record aggressively, and in a manner that allows you the ability to pull up an exceptionally good faders up mix. Or, record passively, in a manner that requires all processing decisions to be saved until mixing. Of course, there's also middle ground, but typically people end up in one camp or the other.
In many ways, circumstance dictates how you choose to go about this. If you're tracking in a big studio, and you're mixing at home, aggressive recording is probably the best choice. If you're tracking at home, and mixing in a big studio with lots of outboard, then you might want to record passively, and mix aggressively. That said, I almost always record aggressively, and there's a very good reason for this: I want to KNOW where I'm at, at all times in the production. The best way to accomplish this, is to record aggressively.
The problem with recording aggressively, is you can no longer MIX aggressively.
From
Zen and the Art of Mixing (Copyright 2010 All Rights Reserved):
"An aggressive recordist will print the tracks exactly as they expect them to be mixed. This means all processing is performed as if the track is actually being mixed. I call this technique “tying the hands”of the mixer, and if you are the mixer, you just tied your own hands. I’m not arguing against this methodology; I’m all for it. But if you record in this manner, you have no option but to capitulate to your recording decisions come mix time. You will not be able to manhandle your tracks again. If you’re used to mixing aggressively, you could very well find yourself out of your usual element. This can be overcome, but there’s definitely a learning curve.
Personally, I can’t stand recording in a non-aggressive manner. As a producer, I like tying my hands, as I trust my early instincts. But this means I’ve had to adapt to mixing less aggressively on projects that I’ve recorded and produced. Both methodologies are valid—you just have to choose which works best for you."
Now, as to leaving compression to the ME...
The Internet is a great place to get bad advice where your stereo compressor is concerned. The number-one myth is the notion that stereo compression should be left in the hands of the mastering engineer. While there’s no doubt that mixing with a stereo compressor takes practice, and while it’s quite possible that you’ll fuck up several mixes in the process (can you say overcompression?), it’s essential that you as the mixer—and only you—compress
your mix."
<SNIP happens>
"So why not leave compression up to the mastering engineer? Simple: your balances will change far too drastically for this to be a reasonable option. Balance is your main weapon for manipulating the listener’s emotions and focus. If you’re going to spend hours upon hours getting those balance relationships just right, why would you find it acceptable for them to completely change come mastering time? If you don’t compress the stereo bus while you mix, you’re not delivering a mix. You’re delivering some weird approximation of a mix, and it’s not even that, since you can’t predict precisely how the mix is going to change—and it will change."
Now brick wall limiting can be left to the Mastering Stage, because limiting overall doesn't throw your balances out of whack, and you don't want to tie the hands of your client later by delivering a pancake of a song.
Enjoy,
Mixerman