C
Chrisulrich
Member
Dear Anyone.
I know these are dead basic questions, I know I should understand this already, I know I'm going to feel an eedjit when I learn the answers...... Here goes!
Compressors - as I understand them - turn sounds DOWN when they reach a point you set. As they're turning sounds DOWN, how can you use them to make sounds LOUDER? Flat don't see it!
Limiters. Same questions as the compression question above - but with a twist. I've got a limiter with 2 buttons on it, Threshold and Output Gain. I can make a track louder, when I put it on the out buss, by moving EITHER knob. Apart from one control controlling the speed of the attack, those are the only two knobs my limiter has. When do I tweak which knob and why, considering tweaking EITHER of them makes the track louder/quieter?
3. Here goes, cos I don't even understand what I'm asking here! You've got your limiter on the outbuss and a compressor on the sound (let's make it a one-sound flute mythical track to keep this easy, but you can add mythical other sounds in the answer if it helps. Dunno if it will.) You want to make the solo flute - but you can add other sounds in the answer if you want - nice and clear and decently loud. When do you just add more volume (turn it up a bit!) when would you use a compressor and when would you just use a limiter on the out buss and not bother with a compressor. And if you were just using a limiter on the outbuss, would you have this flute intentionally a bit too loud so the limiter can 'hear' it and turn it down a bit? And is that how they make their instruments/sounds sound richer/fuller? Sorry for all the sub-questions, it's just I hear pieces that use exactly the same sounds I have, but they always sound richer/fuller as a piece and I've got zero idea how they achieve that, apart from ONE person in another forum saying 'it's to do with compression and limiting'!
Yours respectfully and very puzzledly,
Chris.
I know these are dead basic questions, I know I should understand this already, I know I'm going to feel an eedjit when I learn the answers...... Here goes!
Compressors - as I understand them - turn sounds DOWN when they reach a point you set. As they're turning sounds DOWN, how can you use them to make sounds LOUDER? Flat don't see it!
Limiters. Same questions as the compression question above - but with a twist. I've got a limiter with 2 buttons on it, Threshold and Output Gain. I can make a track louder, when I put it on the out buss, by moving EITHER knob. Apart from one control controlling the speed of the attack, those are the only two knobs my limiter has. When do I tweak which knob and why, considering tweaking EITHER of them makes the track louder/quieter?
3. Here goes, cos I don't even understand what I'm asking here! You've got your limiter on the outbuss and a compressor on the sound (let's make it a one-sound flute mythical track to keep this easy, but you can add mythical other sounds in the answer if it helps. Dunno if it will.) You want to make the solo flute - but you can add other sounds in the answer if you want - nice and clear and decently loud. When do you just add more volume (turn it up a bit!) when would you use a compressor and when would you just use a limiter on the out buss and not bother with a compressor. And if you were just using a limiter on the outbuss, would you have this flute intentionally a bit too loud so the limiter can 'hear' it and turn it down a bit? And is that how they make their instruments/sounds sound richer/fuller? Sorry for all the sub-questions, it's just I hear pieces that use exactly the same sounds I have, but they always sound richer/fuller as a piece and I've got zero idea how they achieve that, apart from ONE person in another forum saying 'it's to do with compression and limiting'!
Yours respectfully and very puzzledly,
Chris.