Okay Gurus...Visual Compression Trick

  • Thread starter Thread starter MercyfullMusic
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MercyfullMusic

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I have a question for you pros out there.

I am having a hard time compressing a waveform the way I want it to look and sound. I have been searching for a way to give myself a hint as to what to use for settings for compressing/limiting a waveform using SONAR's effects. What I'm trying to do is to use the Volume Envolopes for each track on the screen to see how much I need to bring down a waveform in DBs. However it never seems to look quite right after I process the waveform.

Although my tracks each sound individually good, the whole mix sounds too low in volume, even after being processed with T-Racks post-Cakewalk. I think this must be due to these little spikes in volume on each track. I can tame the sound of them down with volume envelopes, however I have noticed that a track doesn't really have a possibility of being pushed louder in T-Racks after this. And looking at the stereo wav file the spikes still remain as if the volume envelopes did not change the waveform. I think this is the real problem.

What am I doing wrong? Is there a way to simply draw a line on the screen similiar to a volume envelope and say "Limit to this point"?

Thanks.
 
Is there a way to simply draw a line on the screen similiar to a volume envelope and say "Limit to this point"?

...aaah, I'm not sure if there's other good way than to use Compression. Using Envelope simply won't raise your audio printed volume. It somehow just push the audio volume down and up, but wont bring up the volume higher than what it's printed. Compression, did this in better approach. Better go...

http://24.62.248.218/thecompressor.html

and...

http://24.62.248.218/Compression.html

There you can read great articles on compression by Ed Rei (here known as sonusman) and Moshe Wohl (here known as Shailat)...

;)
James
 
Broken link?

Looks like either the ip's changed for the web server, or the box is down. :(
 
...uugh, sorry. It should be there, but it's gone. However, here's the copy of the article...
 

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