Using Limiters on Individual Tracks
When most people want dynamiccontrol in the mix, they reach for a compressor. Not me.
In my experience, using limiters on
individual tracks can yield even better and faster results than compression.
But if you want to learn about using
limiters on individual tracks specifically, keep reading.
What’s
the difference between a compressor and a limiter?
Compressors are basically just
limiters on steroids.
Give a limiter the attack, release,
and ratio controls and poof! You’ve got a compressor.
Bestow upon a compressor a light
speed attack and super high ratio and bam! You’ve got a limiter.
Sure there are some tonal factors
that come into play, but the primary objective for both tools is the same: turndown the signal that passes the threshold.
Imagine throwing a bowling ball onto
a trampoline. The fabric stretches to catch the ball and then returns to its
natural state.
Now imagine throwing that same
bowling ball onto the sidewalk. No give. Just a hard stop.
That’s the difference between
compression and limiting.
With compression, there’s a little
bit of flexibility. With limiting, there’s strict control.
How
do you use a limiter in a mix?
You can use a limiter in any
situation where you don’t want the signal to go above a certain level.
Simply lower the threshold until you
get a few decibels of gain reduction on just the loudest parts of the
performance.
Or if your limiter doesn’t have a
threshold parameter, first increase the gain until you get a few decibels of
gain reduction during the loudest parts, then decrease the output level to
compensate for the volume boost.
Easy peasy.
Should
you use limiters on individual tracks?
You can use a limiter on any track
where you want to tightly control the peaks of the signal, including individual
tracks and group busses.
In other words, there’s no limit to
where you can use them. HA! #nailedit.
Where
can you use limiters?
Limiters can be especially useful
for controlling the dynamics of drums, vocals, and acoustic guitars.
Those few snare hits jumping out of
the mix? Limiter on the drum bus.
The singer who belts abruptly every
now and then? Limiter at the end of the vocal chain.
How about those pesky acoustic
guitar strums that are spiking in volume? You get the idea.
Should
I put a limiter on every track?
It probably isn’t necessary, but you
can put a limiter on as many tracks as you like.
Instruments like synths and
distorted guitars may already have a very small dynamic range so in my
experience, there’s really no point in limiting them.
However, if it brings you peace of
mind knowing that no instrument will ever go beyond a specific volume level, go
ahead and limit every track.
Individual tracks, busses, it’s all
fair game.
At the end of the day, nobody will
shut off your music because they could tell you used a limiter instead of a
compressor.
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