TwilightOdyssey
Darkness on the edge of Tone
Re: Explain compressors
Threshold is the point at which the compressor starts pulling down peaks.
Ratio is how aggressive that pulldown is.
Knee is how quickly the compressor starts to act after the initial transient. This is used in conjunction with the Attack and Release.
Not every compressor has discrete control over all of these. Many stomp box compressors have a knob labeled 'sustain'. This knob combines ratio, threshold, and output gain at the same time with a preset knee, attack, and release time. It is not louder than the original signal unless you are applied more make up gain than gain reduction; this is considered an improper way to use a compressor because pumping artefacts will be easily heard this way.
Make Up Gain is used to return the signal back to it's original level after you have pulled it down with the VCA.
A - see the note above re: output gain
B - a guitar sustains much longer than you think
Hope this helps!
It does the latter, not the former. I made it bold so you can see the correct portion.Many people say that a compressor boosts the quiet part of playing and many have also said that a compressor really does not boost the quiet part of playing.
Correct.Here is my understanding. Correct me if I am wrong. I want to understand if a compressor is going to increase the sustain before I drop $99 on a Boss CS-3. I dont care about the tone. I am a beginner and to my ears good tone or bad tone does not make a difference. I just want longer sustain as the kind of music I play needs a longer sustain. I have to play a lot of successive notes with a single strike and hence I need a longer sustain.
A compressor reduces the louder part of playing by reducing the level higher than the threshold.
Correct.The quieter parts are untouched if the compressor gain is untouched.
Correct.Now that the louder parts have been reduced, obviously the sound level is going to be lower than that without the compressor. Now if you did not change the make up gain on the compressor, the quieter part will not change. Right so far?
Incorrect. You are confusing a compressor with an expander.If you increase the make up gain on the compressor, then everything gets louder which is perceived as longer sustain.
Threshold is the point at which the compressor starts pulling down peaks.
Ratio is how aggressive that pulldown is.
Knee is how quickly the compressor starts to act after the initial transient. This is used in conjunction with the Attack and Release.
Not every compressor has discrete control over all of these. Many stomp box compressors have a knob labeled 'sustain'. This knob combines ratio, threshold, and output gain at the same time with a preset knee, attack, and release time. It is not louder than the original signal unless you are applied more make up gain than gain reduction; this is considered an improper way to use a compressor because pumping artefacts will be easily heard this way.
Make Up Gain is used to return the signal back to it's original level after you have pulled it down with the VCA.
Incorrect. Depends on how high a ratio you set in relation to the threshold.There is still a relative difference between the quieter and louder parts, of course.
Incorrect. The overall gain is decreased because your dynamic range has decreased. The only setting that affects gain is the output gain of the compressor. What your ears are perceiving as loudness is due to the Haas Effect.You adjust the attack, gain etc such that everything seems to be playing at the same level and this again gives the perception of longer sustain. In other words, the relative difference in loudness between the quieter and louder parts has reduced and the overall gain has increased. Right?
No clue what you mean by this, but if I am understanding you correctly, this is also Incorrect.The gain on the amp will also increase the quieter part but it also increases the louder part and so the relative difference between the quieter and louder parts gives a perception of low sustain.
Because, as stated above, if you squash the signal enough it becomes very easy to increase the output gain of the entire signal, which will give increased sustain; you are not turning up just the hardest/loudest parts of the frequency spectrum.I dont understand how a compressor can give that long sustain people are talking about.
Two thoughts:If the string has died , there is nothing much anything can do to incease the gain unless you put somethng like a Sustaniac to prevent the string from dying.
A - see the note above re: output gain
B - a guitar sustains much longer than you think
No; you are talking about two totally different technologies. An Ebow or Fernandez Sustainer excites the string so that it is constantly vibrating. This is totally different from compression, which is a psychoacoustic effect.A guitar with a Sustanic is like $800 (Schecter Sun Valley). I doubt a $99 Boss CS-3 can beat a Sustaniac. No?
Hope this helps!
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