The PARIS Forums


Home » The PARIS Forums » PARIS: Main » Compressors in Paris (Comparing stock compressors to other compressors.)
Compressors in Paris [message #107954] Fri, 01 November 2013 10:04 Go to next message
JohnG is currently offline  JohnG   UNITED STATES
Messages: 57
Registered: April 2013
Location: Twin Cities, MN
Member
Hello All
Looking for some insight on the Paris compressors vs. others as I haven't used many other digital compressors.

1) In paris, when I put the stock compressor on a track, It seems to automatically "color" the sound a lot, even if the ratio is at 1:1 and no gain reduction is occurring.
Why does it do this and is it normal? It seems to me that it shouldn't be changing the sound that much before it is even "compressing" anything?

Do other digital compressors do this? Does it have to do with whether they are modeled after different types of hardware compressors such as VCA vs optocompressors, etc?

2) Related question: when I send several tracks to the same aux buss with a compressor selected, does the loudest signal control the amount of compression that occurs? This would imply that you shouldn't send more than one track to a single compressor unless you want them grouped together?

Thanks for any discussion, explanation, insights.
John


John, Twin Cities, MN
Re: Compressors in Paris [message #107955 is a reply to message #107954] Sat, 02 November 2013 04:11 Go to previous messageGo to next message
dnafe is currently offline  dnafe   CANADA
Messages: 390
Registered: February 2009
Senior Member
No it is not unusual for a plugin to "color the sound". My UAD Pultec EQ and LA3A do this, which in some circumstances is all that is needed

And yes the loudest instrument and / or the one with the fastest transients will trigger the comp, so it is something you should be aware of

[Updated on: Sat, 02 November 2013 04:11]

Report message to a moderator

Re: Compressors in Paris [message #107957 is a reply to message #107955] Sun, 03 November 2013 19:16 Go to previous messageGo to next message
JohnG is currently offline  JohnG   UNITED STATES
Messages: 57
Registered: April 2013
Location: Twin Cities, MN
Member
Thanks Don.
So is it compressing the sound before it actually shows on the meters or does it just impart that sound kind of like a tube circuit or what not, just by turning it on?

I'm just comparing to the eq's in paris which don't seem to do anything to the sound much (or at all) until you boost or cut (which you'd want, I would think, with an eq).

Do you like/use the stock paris compressors? What sound do they impart, compared to other compressors?

Thanks again Don for the insight.
I'd be interested in hearing other's thoughts on the Paris compressors (like/don't like), how they compare to other digital compressors, etc.

John


John, Twin Cities, MN
Re: Compressors in Paris [message #107958 is a reply to message #107957] Mon, 04 November 2013 03:25 Go to previous messageGo to next message
dnafe is currently offline  dnafe   CANADA
Messages: 390
Registered: February 2009
Senior Member
For the record I haven't used Paris for about three years but I do remember not using the Paris plugs most of the time, with the exception of the Big EQ.
Re: Compressors in Paris [message #107959 is a reply to message #107954] Tue, 05 November 2013 15:37 Go to previous messageGo to next message
Ted Gerber is currently offline  Ted Gerber   CANADA
Messages: 705
Registered: January 2009
Senior Member
The Paris Compressor(s) are considered one of its best features.

The Brian Tankersley videos deal with them nicely. Pretty sure someone uploaded them to the Web.

The verbs that Mike Audet ported over are also really nice, and have a classic '70s sound to them...

Ted
Re: Compressors in Paris [message #107965 is a reply to message #107959] Wed, 06 November 2013 20:34 Go to previous messageGo to next message
JohnG is currently offline  JohnG   UNITED STATES
Messages: 57
Registered: April 2013
Location: Twin Cities, MN
Member
Thanks for the comments, guys.
I appreciate your sharing your opinions, experiences.
Anyone else care to comment on the compressors in Paris?
Its great to be able to communicate with people that use this system.
Thanks again.
John


John, Twin Cities, MN
Re: Compressors in Paris [message #107967 is a reply to message #107965] Thu, 07 November 2013 04:56 Go to previous messageGo to next message
mikeaudet   CANADA
Messages: 476
Registered: February 2009
Location: Canada
Senior Member
Hi John,

I'm pretty sure that you are hearing the compressor working despite the meters not showing yet. If I remember right, the meters are based on a volume check every 3000 samples or so. That leaves lots of time for peaks to get through unnoticed by the meters.

The original stock PARIS compressor was "crunched" to allow 16 of them to run on a PARIS card at once. A side effect of this optimization is that it dulls the highs when short attack times are dialed in. I'm not sure if this was intended or a happy accident, but it can sound really good on bright sources.

All the best!

Mike
Re: Compressors in Paris [message #107974 is a reply to message #107967] Fri, 08 November 2013 08:13 Go to previous message
JohnG is currently offline  JohnG   UNITED STATES
Messages: 57
Registered: April 2013
Location: Twin Cities, MN
Member
Thanks Mike!
Interesting insight that I will consider when using the compressors.


John, Twin Cities, MN
Previous Topic: Bounced mix levels are low. Why?
Next Topic: Tracking and mixing levels in Paris
Goto Forum:
  


Current Time: Sun Nov 24 18:43:08 PST 2024

Total time taken to generate the page: 0.01296 seconds