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Compressor and Noise in Recording

Compressor is an essential part in recording. Todays recordings always use compression in some individual tracks, and also possibly the entire mix.
But whenever you compress, you add noise. It always happens because there is no such noise free recordings. So here we have a problem that requires a solution if our recordings are not to suffer.
First of all we should know why compressor add noise? Let's look in more detail...
The action of a compressor is to reduce high levels in a signal so that they are closer to the lower levels. We say that the compressor reduces the dynamic range.
The problem now is that the signal now sounds quieter because the peak levels are lower. So we need to amplify the signal back up. This is called make up gain.
So now we have a signal that is as loud as it was before in the peaks, and the lower-level sections are louder too.So in bringing up the lower levels through make-up gain, the noise level is brought up too. What can be done?
In an individual track of just one instrument or vocal, while the instrument is playing the noise will be obscured, or masked as we call it. The noise will only be audible in the gaps when the instrument stops playing. If we can silence those gaps, then the noise will be inaudible. To do that, we need another piece of equipment - the noise gate.
A noise gate works by detecting the difference in level between the wanted signal and the noise. Where there is wanted signal, which will be higher in level than the noise, the gate lets it through. When there is just noise, the gate shuts it off. Noise gates can be tricky to set up, but the same effect can be achieved by simply muting sections of a track when the instrument isn't playing.
It is important to realize that the above only works where there are gaps. If you compress the entire stereo mix, then there will be no gaps, hence the noise gate cannot provide any benefit.
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