Picked this one up a while ago and just today tried it with Vegas and it seems to work a treat.
If you need to tame fast transients without killing them put a limiter before the compressor. I simply used the Track Compressor's 'Limit At -6dB' preset for the limiter before WaveHammer tweaked to my liking. If you don't have WaveHammer (comes with Sound Forge) then another instance of the Track Compressor should do.
Reason I do this is I do videos of Indian musical events and the tabla is one fierce drum to tame. The feed from the desk I get to record is before the outboard compressor and Eq, I've typically got the gain set on my recorder with the drums hitting -6dB and everything else muddling around -30dB. Something needs to be done or the vocals are way too quiet but I don't want to loose the magic attack from the drums.
The limiter knocks the transient hit of the drum back enough so I can then set the compressors attack time to still let it though while still adding punch to the rest of the sound. This also adds a bit more oomph to bass drum.
I prefer to add this after the track volume envelope and gain control by adding a buss and routing the track to the buss. Then I can 'push' the sound into the compressor. The loudness goes up but the volts stays the same.
Bob.
If you need to tame fast transients without killing them put a limiter before the compressor. I simply used the Track Compressor's 'Limit At -6dB' preset for the limiter before WaveHammer tweaked to my liking. If you don't have WaveHammer (comes with Sound Forge) then another instance of the Track Compressor should do.
Reason I do this is I do videos of Indian musical events and the tabla is one fierce drum to tame. The feed from the desk I get to record is before the outboard compressor and Eq, I've typically got the gain set on my recorder with the drums hitting -6dB and everything else muddling around -30dB. Something needs to be done or the vocals are way too quiet but I don't want to loose the magic attack from the drums.
The limiter knocks the transient hit of the drum back enough so I can then set the compressors attack time to still let it though while still adding punch to the rest of the sound. This also adds a bit more oomph to bass drum.
I prefer to add this after the track volume envelope and gain control by adding a buss and routing the track to the buss. Then I can 'push' the sound into the compressor. The loudness goes up but the volts stays the same.
Bob.