I
Ivorykeys
New member
Hi,
I think I understand the role of a compressor in recording work, but in a live sound application, can the effect of a compressor actually be heard to the audience, or does it's effect only get transferred to the recording medium?
Also, I want to hook-up both a compressor AND a graphic EQ to a single channel with a mic for voice. I assume I would do this with the channel insert, which is on my Mackie Onyx 1202. In the signal chain, should I hook-up the compressor first, & then the EQ, or the other way around? My voice is rather thin (trebley), and I want to increase the mid-base a bit, so I'm thinking that maybe I'd want to hook-up the compressor first to first limit the low/high peaks of the whole range, and then boost the low/mids a little. Please tell me if this is the correct train of thought. I'm using a KMS-105 mic directly into the ONYX preamp.
Lastly, my EQ has 2 balanced inputs & 2 balanced outputs (Klark Teknik DN360), but, with the exception of the Klark manual (which is very brief, albeit, tough for me to understand) all books that I've read suggest that only a single (i.e., left) channel on an EQ is required for hook-up, and not a dual (i.e., stereo-left/right) is required. And some tutorials say to use special "insert-Y-cables", that have a TRS jack that branches into 2 mono jacks. Klark calls for all balanced (XLR) cables, so I'm thoroughly confused about this mono/stereo & balanced/unbalanced thing.
I would appreciate any thoughts about how this thing is supposed to be hooked-up in conjunction with the compressor on the same channel.
Thanks,
Ivorykeys
I think I understand the role of a compressor in recording work, but in a live sound application, can the effect of a compressor actually be heard to the audience, or does it's effect only get transferred to the recording medium?
Also, I want to hook-up both a compressor AND a graphic EQ to a single channel with a mic for voice. I assume I would do this with the channel insert, which is on my Mackie Onyx 1202. In the signal chain, should I hook-up the compressor first, & then the EQ, or the other way around? My voice is rather thin (trebley), and I want to increase the mid-base a bit, so I'm thinking that maybe I'd want to hook-up the compressor first to first limit the low/high peaks of the whole range, and then boost the low/mids a little. Please tell me if this is the correct train of thought. I'm using a KMS-105 mic directly into the ONYX preamp.
Lastly, my EQ has 2 balanced inputs & 2 balanced outputs (Klark Teknik DN360), but, with the exception of the Klark manual (which is very brief, albeit, tough for me to understand) all books that I've read suggest that only a single (i.e., left) channel on an EQ is required for hook-up, and not a dual (i.e., stereo-left/right) is required. And some tutorials say to use special "insert-Y-cables", that have a TRS jack that branches into 2 mono jacks. Klark calls for all balanced (XLR) cables, so I'm thoroughly confused about this mono/stereo & balanced/unbalanced thing.
I would appreciate any thoughts about how this thing is supposed to be hooked-up in conjunction with the compressor on the same channel.
Thanks,
Ivorykeys