Jump to content

Sidechaining


Recommended Posts

Can anyone describe to me in layman's terms what sidechaining is? I hear it talked about a lot, and it appears to be useful, but the technical terminology fizzles my brain. Is it sort of like a gate?

Stolen from another forum, but I think this is the best description that I found:

 

Basically the idea of sidechaining is to attenuate the volume (accentuate the gain level) of one sound once it is triggered by another sound....this is used all the time in radio and it is called ducking....basically what happens is when the music is playing all is dandy and once the DJ talks the level drops or ducks under his voice...when he stops, the music level goes back to normal....this is all handled by sidechaning compressors together....

 

hope that helps :)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Nemo got it right.

The most common place where you can hear it today is in prog - that effect you hear when the kick "stops" the pad, and then it rises again just to be "stopped" by the next kick. Sounds preety cool.

It's also extremely useful in making basslines - instead of eqing it to fit with the kick, just sc-compress it and your problem is solved. Works like a magic glue.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Okay, I have a better idea now, thanks (although I don't have a clue how to do it).

 

SG - I'm asking from buddies because a very unfortunate thing about the music scene is that people who know cool stuff seem to purposely make their descriptions impossible to understand. It's an exclusive club and the kids have to push and shove to get simple information.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Okay, I have a better idea now, thanks (although I don't have a clue how to do it).

 

SG - I'm asking from buddies because a very unfortunate thing about the music scene is that people who know cool stuff seem to purposely make their descriptions impossible to understand. It's an exclusive club and the kids have to push and shove to get simple information.

I think its good you asked though, cause a lot of people dont know how to do this kind of things. There is a nifty little VSTe that does this very simple, and the results are pretty cool. It comes with a little FAQ as well, which makes the understanding of Sidechaining a bit easier.

 

http://www.db-audioware.com/

 

http://www.db-audioware.com/sidechaincompressor.htm

http://www.db-audioware.com/sidechaingate.htm

 

Hope you find them useful, you can always "Try before Buy"! :D

Link to comment
Share on other sites

for sure there is loads of people withholding info. but there is more than enough people sharing information. Go check out isratrance. Go check out other synth fora. And google. or blackle.com :P

In the isra bass thread there def should be someone explaining how to do sidechaining.

Its quite lengthy to explain and i am to lazy for that (and i even dont know that much about it really). use the search!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I assume this is sidechain compression you're referring to, since I'm not familiar with any other use of the word sidechain in audio.

 

The following is another description to help round out the definition:

 

Sidechain compression is triggering the compression of one signal with another. The way a compressor works, in normal mode, is that the input is split into two paths: one gets rectified into a DC voltage, which is then used to control the attenuation on the other path of the signal, which is what appears at the output. In sidechain compression, you are simply bringing in a second signal to be rectified and used to control the attenuation of the signal you want compressed.

 

Ducking, as mentioned above, is often used with the kick triggering the bass or other sound, so that the compressed sound drops in level when the kick hits. Therefore, the bass 'ducks' the kick. This is kind of a cheap way of dealing with an overabundance of low frequencies, when used to have the bass duck the kick.

 

Another application of sidechain compression is de-essing. In this, a vocal signal is split into two, and one of these is equalized such that only a certain frequency range is present (what range depends on the vocal). That way, the vocal part is only compressed during the sibilant parts (the parts with overly high levels of high-mid frequencies).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Restore formatting

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...