Compression

5 min read Intermediate

Compression controls the dynamic range of audio—the difference between the loudest and quietest parts. It makes quiet parts louder and loud parts quieter, resulting in a more consistent, polished sound.

Why Use Compression?

Compression Parameters

Threshold

The level at which compression begins:

Ratio

How much compression is applied:

Attack

How quickly compression kicks in after signal exceeds threshold:

Release

How quickly compression stops after signal falls below threshold:

Makeup Gain

Boosts the output to compensate for volume reduction from compression.

Using Compression in FlowState

  1. Open the Mixer
    Press 2 or click "Mixer" in the bottom panel.
  2. Click a track's effect slot
    Each channel has effect slots. Click to add or edit effects.
  3. Select Compressor
    Choose compressor from the effect menu.
  4. Adjust parameters
    Start with a preset, then tweak to taste.

Compression by Instrument

Kick Drum

Snare

Bass

Vocals

Tip: When in doubt, use gentle compression (2:1 or 3:1) with 3-6 dB of gain reduction. Heavy compression is for specific effects, not everyday mixing.

Gain Reduction Meter

Watch the gain reduction meter while compressing:

Common Compression Mistakes

Sidechain Compression

Sidechain compression ducks one sound when another plays:

Parallel Compression

Blend compressed and uncompressed signals:

  1. Compress a copy of the track heavily
  2. Blend it with the original
  3. Gets the benefits of compression while keeping dynamics

Using Voice Commands

Add compression to the vocals

Make the kick punchier

The bass is too dynamic

Compress the drums more

Quick Settings Reference

Gentle/Transparent2:1, slow attack, slow release
Punchy drums4:1, slow attack, fast release
Smooth vocals3:1, medium attack, medium release
Consistent bass4:1, medium attack, medium release
Heavy limiting10:1+, fast attack, fast release

Next Steps