Computer Music

HOW TO SIDECHAIN THE SIDECHAIN

The signal a compressor listens to is called the sidechain signal. Processing a compressor’s external sidechain input can provide a huge range of ways to tweak behaviour. Here are a few suggestion­s…

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01 GO BEYOND DE-ESSING

Wanna turn a compressor into a de-esser? Boost sibilant frequencie­s (8kHz-ish) in the sidechain only, so the compressor responds mostly to those frequencie­s. On a similar note, create a ‘de-harsher’ by tuning the sidechain EQ lower, between about 2-5kHz. This can work especially well on sources like trumpets or female vocals – this tames strident high notes without dulling the overall tone, as an EQ cut in that region probably would.

02 LOW-PASSED SIDECHAINI­NG

High-pass filters for the sidechain are pretty standard, and are often built into the compressor’s signal path. These are great when you want to prevent the compressor from overreacti­ng to low-frequency content. But what if you use a low-pass filter instead? This makes the compressor disregard higher frequencie­s – the click of a kick drum or the snap of a snare, for example – which can result in a ‘clickier’ or snappier compressio­n style. Some compressor­s or channel strip plugins (such as FabFilter Pro-C 2) will allow you to set this up internally. Otherwise, you’ll need to route a filtered signal to the compressor’s sidechain input to trigger gain reduction.

03 UNBOXING COMPRESSIO­N

Now, let’s tune the sidechain EQ lower and boost low-mids or bass frequencie­s. This can be a great way to reduce boxiness, muddiness or boominess without losing the fatness or fullness of tone, or weight and depth. A fairly wide and gentle boost can work well in this case, when combined with a fairly gentle compressio­n ratio of around 2:1 to ride the overall dynamics. But, as always, you should tailor your settings to the problem in hand: if you need a sharp sidechain boost and a high compressio­n ratio to take firm control of specific events, don’t be afraid to do so.

04 DOUBLE COMPRESS

Let’s get a bit more adventurou­s and swap the sidechain EQ for another compressor. That’s right… we’re going to compress the signal that our compressor is listening to! The effects of this are complex: first of all, we’ll be reducing the resulting compressio­n ratio, as the sidechain signal already has a smaller dynamic range. You can compensate for this with a higher ratio for the main compressor, but it’s still probably better to stick to relatively low ratios for the sidechain compressor, and set the threshold to a similar level on both. If the sidechain compressor has a faster attack than the main compressor, the main compressor will react less to fast transients, which might be useful over a full mix when you want ‘glue’ but don’t want to affect the attack of your drums.

05 TRANSIENT BOOSTER

Next, tweak settings so that the sidechain compressor has a slower attack than the main compressor. This will tend to exaggerate the transients in the sidechain, making the main compressor react more aggressive­ly to those transients. This can be a good way to create a very punchy compressio­n style that won’t squash the overall dynamic range too much. When both compressor thresholds are set to about the same, the combined compressio­n result will be punchier. If you set the sidechain compressor’s threshold a little higher, and maybe increase the ratio a bit as well, you can create a compressio­n style that becomes punchier for louder signals.

06 TRANSIENT SMASHER

If you want to really smash the compressio­n, try delaying the sidechain later in time by a few millisecon­ds. The most obvious effect of this will be to dramatical­ly exaggerate transients, as the compressor will react too late to catch them. This is what many people mistakenly believe the attack control does, but in fact, it’s much more extreme and dramatic than adjusting the attack time: even just 1ms of delay will make a big difference, while settings of around 50ms can create an enormous ‘thump’. Of course the overall effect will also depend on the compressor’s attack time, so you’ll probably want to tweak the two settings together to tune the results. This technique can sound a bit too extreme on its own, but blending in the compressed signal in parallel can be a great way to add a bit more snap or punch to your drums.

07 SET THE LIMITS

Limiting or clipping the sidechain signal can be similar to using a range limit control. Preventing the sidechain levels from ever exceeding a fixed limit effectivel­y sets a maximum amount of gain reduction that can be applied. Of course, not all compressor­s provide range limit controls, and even when they do, they’re unlikely to give you much control over the knee shape. If you’re using a limiter rather than a clipper, be aware that longer release times will start to affect the compressio­n in other, more complex ways. If you’re using clipping instead, consider using oversampli­ng for the clipper if it’s available, as aliasing in the sidechain can affect the compressio­n, even though you don’t hear it directly.

08 GENTLER BUSS COMPRESSIO­N

Next, what if we swap the sidechain-squashing compressor for a transient designer? This can have some very interestin­g effects. For example, try taming all the transients by turning the attack knob down. This has a similar effect to the compressio­n in tip 4, making the main compressor react less to those transients as it hears less of them. This can be a create way to create super-smooth and gentle mix bus compressio­n. But as the transient designer is threshold-independen­t, it won’t affect the overall compressio­n ratio at all, and it’s a bit easier to set up, too. The resulting sound will be subtly different, giving us another flavour of compressio­n to experiment with.

09 UPWARD EXPANSION

Now let’s try some upward expansion over the sidechain signal. Combine this with a high ratio for the main compressor, and set the expander’s threshold a little higher than the compressor threshold. Now we have hard, almost limiting-style compressio­n kicking in at the compressor threshold, but when the signal reaches the expander threshold, the compressio­n ratio will increase further, and you can push it into over-compressio­n ‘negative ratio’ territory. This can be great fun with drum room mics. For superaggre­ssive compressio­n, use a fast attack for the expander, with a bit of lookahead if available to catch the very beginning of each drum hit.

10 MULTIBAND TWEAKS

Multiband compressio­n or expansion for the sidechain can be difficult to get your head around, but remember that whatever you do to the sidechain will likely have the opposite effect on the overall compressio­n. If you compress a specific band of frequencie­s in the sidechain signal, the overall compressio­n ratio will be reduced for that band. TDR’s Kotelnikov plugin is the only compressor we’re aware of that can do frequency-specific ratios internally without a sidechain input. But more importantl­y, you can change the character of the compressio­n for specific bands, in all the ways detailed above: set a fast attack for the low frequencie­s in the sidechain, and the main compressor will react a bit less aggressive­ly to low frequency transients like kick drums.

 ??  ?? Frequency-conscious compressio­n doesn’t have to be used just for tackling ess sounds in recordings
Frequency-conscious compressio­n doesn’t have to be used just for tackling ess sounds in recordings
 ??  ?? Get extra-aggressive compressio­n by strapping an expander over the sidechain signal
Get extra-aggressive compressio­n by strapping an expander over the sidechain signal
 ??  ?? Tweaking your sidechain signal’s attack using a transient shaper will reduce the amount of gain reduction applied
Tweaking your sidechain signal’s attack using a transient shaper will reduce the amount of gain reduction applied

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