sidechaining???

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cliff richard

cliff richard

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i hear people talking alot about sidechaining, so im guessing that it must be quite a useful tool. i was wondering if someone could please tell me what it is, and give me an example of what i would use it for?

cheers
 
Most gates, compressors, limiters and some EQ's have a sidechain. It essentially works like a trigger. Whenever the sidechain receives a signal it activates the device.

You can use it to 'duck' a signal. For instance the kick could trigger a compressor on the bass so that the bass is turned down when the kick is hitting.

You could duck a reverb or delay track whenever the main dry track is playing.

You could use an undersnare mic to trigger a gate so that it opens the top snare mic or a room mic when the snare is struck. That way you don't have the high hat triggering the gate.

There are lots of weird uses when you think about it.
 
One of the most popular uses is similar to what you'd hear on a radio commercial - The voiceover is used as a signal to the sidechain compressor on the music bed. When the announcer speaks, it triggers the compressor on the music (ducking, as stated).

A lot of engineers will sidechain heavy rhythm guitar tracks in a similar fasion - when the vocalist is going, the guitars get pushed down just a dB or two, then come back up to normal when there's no vocal part.
 
Another nice little trick is to have a hi hat pattern sidechained into a gate and thagate is used on a pad sound. The hi hat opens and closes the gate and you get that funky 'chop' effect on the pad sound.
A great tool and so many uses.
 
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