Sound Engineering: 3 of 4
Posted by: Jon Baumgartner in Tips and Tricks, Sound Solutions, Combo on
Apr 13
This is installment #3 of our sound system discussions.
OK. The band is well rehearsed. They have good equipment, and it's properly set. They sing in tune. The balance between instruments and voices is perfect. The execution of the material is flawless. The guitars are perfectly in tune with the keyboard. The Front of House engineer (you) is doing a great job mixing and every nuance is in place.
So why doesn't it sound like concerts we go to? There are quite possibly several reasons for that, but a significant portion of that reason is due to the lack of a compressor in the system. Most bands, schools, and churches have to be budget-conscious when considering a new sound system (or the system designer doesn't have an awareness of compressors!) and a handy and inexpensive piece of equipment gets left out of the mix.
Imagine yourself sitting in your living room listening to a CD. At the end of the song you know the drummer raised both sticks in the air, high over his head, and brought them down as hard as he could to play the final flam on the head of the snare drum. At the same time, he stomped on his bass drum pedal with all his might. You know he did this because you can hear the type of tone created by that sort of attack. What you have never noticed is this: it didn't get any louder, did it?
Now imagine you are sitting in a recording studio in LA, watching this same piece of music being recorded, and you are in the live room with the drum set. At the end of the song, the drummer does this same move and it's LOUD! It's an assault on the senses and uncomfortable to be around. Why don't we have this sensation when we listen to the CD?
A simple device called a compressor is the answer. Imagine the volume level of the music as a straight horizontal line. Now imagine the volume level when the drummer does that big ending. The volume (or Sound Pressure Level, SPL) increases drastically and quickly, which results in a "spike" or transient in our normal listening level. A compressor senses the beginning of the rapid increase in SPL and squashes it back down to something closer to our usual listening level. By doing this, we get all of the variation in tone and very little of the volume change.
In professionally recorded productions, every track that is susceptible to rapid and dramatic dynamic changes is compressed. Vocals, instruments -- virtually everything that contributes to the recording -- exhibits dynamic changes in SPL, and over the years we have discovered that we humans don't like momentary and large dynamic changes. It startles and affronts the listener. Remember when your best friend crept up behind you as a child and slammed a large book shut right behind your head? They had to peel you off the ceiling, right? Therefore, every piece of music you hear on the radio, on tapes and CDs, on the television and at professional concerts has been compressed everywhere as necessary to limit these uncomfortable dynamic changes and to smooth out the performance.
Now, back to our perfectly performing band (remember them?). The reason they don't sound as professional may well be due to the lack of compression. When a singer or an instrument hits a note or phrase aggressively, the SPL changes (upwards and quickly...remember, we don't like that) and the listening audience is subconsciously aware that it doesn't sound as good as the music we listen to at home.
Another very real circumstance that we experience in audio for worship is the Pastor who likes to accentuate occasionally to get his or her point across. You (the engineer) have got Pastor's channel set so when the message is being delivered in a whisper it is still being heard. And then, tragedy occurs. Pastor RIPS out the point of the message in an extremely exuberant fashion and the words that used to be soft and soothing are now really loud and the congregation is thinking about how startled they are and totally lose track of the message. They are also wondering how the mix engineer could allow this to happen.
You (the mix engineer), in the meantime, have noticed that your record levels on the tape for shut-ins shot from +3 to +15, and you have red lights all over the place. On the tape, when you get to that spot, instead of comforting speech, you'll have nice hairy distortion. You ran out of headroom at the recorder inputs due to the transient peak.
A compressor will solve all of these nightmares. It will also protect your system. If someone drops a live microphone while the system is operating at a high level, the sudden impact of the mic on the floor can cause an increase in short-term SPL dramatic enough to blow a speaker. Most compressors have "brick wall" limiting, which means you can set it so the transient change in SPL simply will not exceed a set point.
A compressor is a means of bringing a more professional audio presentation to your audio product, whether it be weekend band, school musical, worship services, or recording activities. The mix will be more pleasant and easier for you (the engineer) to manage. You can use one side of a dual channel compressor for your main mix, and one side for your recorded mix. If funds are available, you could get another unit to compress your monitor mix.
Remember, musicians that like what they are hearing are happy musicians. Happy musicians generally play better. You can also insert one side of the compressor specifically into that pesky singers channel, which allows for extreme vocal delivery changes and dramatic execution of the material without all those nasty technical results.
If you have further questions about compression, please feel free to contact jbaumgartner@westmusic.com. I'll be happy to help. Happy mixing!




