Mix Roastby M Street Music
Dynamics & Compression

What is Compression?

Compression reduces the volume difference between the loudest and quietest parts of an audio signal, making the overall level more consistent.

How It Works

A compressor monitors the incoming signal level and automatically turns it down when it crosses a set threshold. The amount of reduction is controlled by the ratio — a 4:1 ratio means that for every 4 dB the signal exceeds the threshold, only 1 dB passes through. Attack and release controls determine how quickly the compressor engages and lets go, which shapes the character of the compression dramatically. Beyond simple level control, compression reshapes the envelope of a sound. A slow attack lets transients punch through before the compressor clamps down, preserving the snap of a snare or the pick attack on a guitar. A fast attack catches those transients immediately, producing a smoother, more controlled sound. The release time determines how long the compressor stays active after the signal drops below threshold — too fast and you get audible pumping, too slow and the compressor never fully resets between hits. Modern compressors come in several circuit topologies — VCA, FET, optical, and variable-mu — each imparting a different sonic character. VCA compressors (like the SSL G-Bus) are clean and precise. FET compressors (like the 1176) are fast and aggressive. Optical compressors (like the LA-2A) are smooth and musical. Understanding these differences helps you choose the right tool for each source.

Why It Matters for Your Mix

Compression is arguably the most important dynamic processing tool in mixing. Without it, individual tracks fight for attention — quiet passages disappear behind louder elements, and peaks stick out uncomfortably. Proper compression ensures that a vocal remains intelligible throughout a verse, that a bass guitar sits consistently in the pocket, and that drums have both punch and body. It is the bridge between a raw recording and a polished mix. Beyond individual tracks, compression on busses and the mix bus provides "glue" — a cohesive feel that makes separately recorded instruments sound like they belong together. Mastering engineers rely on gentle compression to give a final mix its sense of unity and loudness. Learning to compress well is arguably the single biggest step toward professional-sounding mixes.

Common Mistakes

Over-compressing everything

Applying heavy compression to every track kills the natural dynamics of a mix and makes it sound flat and lifeless. Not every track needs compression — sometimes automation or simply adjusting the fader is the better choice.

Ignoring the gain reduction meter

Many beginners set compression by ear alone without watching how much gain reduction is actually happening. If you are seeing 10-15 dB of reduction on a vocal, you are likely squashing the life out of it. For most mixing applications, 3-6 dB of gain reduction is a healthy starting point.

Using the same settings on every source

A compressor setting that works on a snare drum will sound terrible on a vocal. Each source has different transient characteristics and dynamic behavior, so attack, release, ratio, and threshold must be tailored to the specific material.

How We Analyze This in Your Mix

RoastYourMix analyzes your mix's dynamic range, crest factor, and transient preservation across the frequency spectrum. We measure the difference between peak and RMS levels to estimate overall compression density, flag sections where dynamics may be over-compressed (low crest factor), and highlight moments where excessive compression causes audible pumping or a "squashed" feel.

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Frequently Asked Questions

For most vocal styles, aim for 3-6 dB of gain reduction with a moderate ratio of 3:1 to 4:1. A medium attack (10-30 ms) preserves the consonant articulation, while a medium release (50-100 ms) keeps the compression transparent. Many engineers use two compressors in series with light settings rather than one compressor working hard.

Limiting is essentially extreme compression with a very high ratio (10:1 or higher, often infinity:1). A compressor gently reduces dynamics over a range, while a limiter acts as a hard ceiling that prevents the signal from exceeding a set level. Limiters are commonly used in mastering to maximize loudness.

Light compression during recording — especially on vocals and bass — can help manage levels and prevent clipping, but keep it gentle (2-3 dB of reduction) since you cannot undo it. Heavier shaping is best left for mixing, where you can adjust settings non-destructively.

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