Studio Techniques

Studio techniques & music production tutorials on recording, mixing, mastering and effects processing for users of Ableton, Cubase, Logic Pro, Reason, FL Studio and ProTools.

Do I Need An Outboard Compressor? What Will it Do for Your Productions


Do I Need An Outboard Compressor?

Do I Need An Outboard Compressor?

At some point in your studio adventures you might be asking yourself this question: do I need an outboard compressor? Maybe you’ve heard that recording with some compression can be helpful. Or perhaps you’ve seen the “big boys” using outboard compressors in the mixing stage. You know they exist. So do you need one?

What It Can Do For You

The best reason I can think of for someone to use an outboard compressor (i.e. a physical hardware compressor in your signal path) is for recording purposes. A little compression on your vocals, kick or snare drum, or even your bass guitar can be a nice touch when going in to your DAW.

For a dynamic vocalist (someone who varies between loud and soft passages of singing), a simple compressor inserted after your mic pre but before you converters can be a life saver. You’ll tame the peaks, bring up the quiet parts, and get a more even performance going to “tape.” The same is true for recording snare drum. I usually like to compress my snares to get a fatter sound in the mix, so with an outboard compressor you can get this sound set before you even hit record. Nice!

Try A Channel Strip

For most people in a home or project studio you’re using an audio interface with built in mic pres. This means that after you signal hits the mic pre it immediately goes to your converters. No space to slap in a compressor. That is, of course, unless your interface happens to have some insert jacks in the back. Happy clap for you if they do!

If not then you’ll need to not only purchase an outboard compressor but an external mic preamp  to patch in before the compressor. Great, just what you wanted. More stuff to buy! Of course the best deal out there for this type of thing is generally a channel strip. This is an all in one hardware unit comprised of a mic preamp, compressor, and even an EQ. I actually use a channel strip in my studio and it’s been super easy to implement. There are some great channel strips out there from companies like PreSonus, ART, and JoeMeek that are super affordable (especially considering you’re getting three units in one).

But, You Don’t Really Need One

To be honest though, you don’t really need an outboard compressor or a channel strip. In fact, up until a year ago I tracked everything for all of my clients straight into my interface. No compression, no EQ, no nothing. Just the solid built in pres. The trick when it comes to really dynamic vocalists or musicians is to keep your hand on the gain knob for the preamp. You have to go old school and turn it down when they get loud. I know it sounds crazy having to do something yourself these days, but trust me it works!

As far as compression in the mixing phase goes, for most people it’s just easier to use plugins. And they sound incredible! They really do. If you have a favorite outboard compressor then be my guest and patch it in to your DAW, but for the rest of you, don’t feel like you’re missing out. Just get to work with your interface and your plugins. You have everything you need to make killer music already!

Original source: http://therecordingrevolution.com/2012/06/01/do-you-need-an-outboard-compressor/#more-4100

Do I Need An Outboard Compressor?

—————

Ableton Live, Logic Pro, Reason, Cubase & ProTools tools  –  royalty free loops, samples and sounds from Loopmasters – the sample boutique.


Related Posts

Analog Sound Recording – Sound ‘Real’ Using Outboard Gear
Analog Sound Recording - Sound 'Real' Using Outboard Gear Analog Sound Recording - Sound 'Real' Using Outboard Gear Music production in an all-digital environment definitely has its advantages - total recall, infinite ...
READ MORE
A Useful Table Of Compressor Settings
Following our generic EQ settings, we thought it would be nice to include some generic compressor settings. These settings were originally posted on http://www.pcmus.com/ These are by no means fixed rules ...
READ MORE
Using Pre Fader Aux Sends Creatively in Your Productions
Using Pre Fader Aux Sends Creatively Using Pre Fader Aux Sends Creatively Most popular DAWs nowadays will let you route an Aux send signal either pre- or post-fader. When an Aux send ...
READ MORE
Parallel compression Tutorial – New York Compression
Parallel compression Tutorial - New York Compression Parallel compression Tutorial - New York Compression Parallel compression Tutorial - New York Compression Using compression effectively is fairly easy once you get your head around ...
READ MORE
Compression Basics - Getting Under The Hood
 Compression Basics - Getting Under The Hood pt.2  Compression Basics - Getting Under The Hood pt.2 Hi guys, here's the second post on compression basics. If you missed the first one go ...
READ MORE
Analog Sound Recording – Sound ‘Real’ Using Outboard Gear
A Useful Table Of Compressor Settings
Using Pre Fader Aux Sends Creatively in Your Productions
Parallel compression Tutorial – New York Compression
Compression Basics – Getting Under The Hood pt.2

One Response to “Do I Need An Outboard Compressor? What Will it Do for Your Productions”

  1. Hello

    Спасибо за Ваш блог! Узнал много интересного!

Leave a Reply