understanding compression
Posted: Tue Apr 21, 2015 4:00 am
Gonna try to do this without uploading pics. Let me know if they're needed please.
I'm experimenting with compressing a recording of voice and guitar with a high amplitude variability. There is one spot where the voice gets too loud and pierces the ear at my overall target volume.
I am using the built-in compression effect, not an add-on, and I am not using the make-up gain setting, as I plan on setting the overall level later.
I used the peak amplitude analyzer on all of the audio right around the ear-piercing peak (but not the peak itself) and found that peak amplitude was -7 dB. I analyzed the part with the ear-piercing peak, and found a peak amplitude of -3.5 dB. So, I selected the whole section, peak and quiet part, set my compression threshold for -7 and started playing with the ratio.
No matter what I do, the volume of the peak is not changing. I did notice, however, that a portion of the non-ear-piercing part that is well below the threshold (I measured it's peak at -14 dB) is reduced in volume when I apply the compression. Toggling back and forth between compressed and not (using ctrl-z/y) reveals no visual change in the peak, but a reduction in amplitude in the quiet part.
Isn't that backwards? I thought the compression was supposed to affect only the amplitudes above the threshold, and have no effect below. What's happening for me is the opposite!
Thanks in advance for any replies
I'm experimenting with compressing a recording of voice and guitar with a high amplitude variability. There is one spot where the voice gets too loud and pierces the ear at my overall target volume.
I am using the built-in compression effect, not an add-on, and I am not using the make-up gain setting, as I plan on setting the overall level later.
I used the peak amplitude analyzer on all of the audio right around the ear-piercing peak (but not the peak itself) and found that peak amplitude was -7 dB. I analyzed the part with the ear-piercing peak, and found a peak amplitude of -3.5 dB. So, I selected the whole section, peak and quiet part, set my compression threshold for -7 and started playing with the ratio.
No matter what I do, the volume of the peak is not changing. I did notice, however, that a portion of the non-ear-piercing part that is well below the threshold (I measured it's peak at -14 dB) is reduced in volume when I apply the compression. Toggling back and forth between compressed and not (using ctrl-z/y) reveals no visual change in the peak, but a reduction in amplitude in the quiet part.
Isn't that backwards? I thought the compression was supposed to affect only the amplitudes above the threshold, and have no effect below. What's happening for me is the opposite!
Thanks in advance for any replies