For a video version of this story on sidechain compression, click here.

If you read SonicScoop, chances are you already know a thing or two about compressors. You’re probably already familiar with basic controls like your threshold, which allows you to set the point at which a compressor “kicks in”, and your ratio, which allows you to adjust the amount of compression you’ll get.

Early on into their training, most new engineers will also understand the concepts behind controls like attack, release and knee, which essentially adjust how swiftly your compressor reacts to signals that approach the threshold. (Even though it can take a while, sometimes years, to hear these variables well and to develop good instincts about tweaking them.)

But one of the last things that new engineers tend to explore when it comes to compression is sidechaining. For those who are unfamiliar with it, this is the process of using the output of one track to control the action of a compressor on a completely different track.

There was a time, decades ago, when many compressors lacked this function. But by the early 2000s, companies like dbx, Alesis and FMR had started to offer sidechain inputs on even their most affordable units. And today, a good DAW will allow you to add a sidechain input to almost any compressor, regardless of how simple its layout might be.

Sidechaining is a technique that can be used like a scalpel or a paintbrush, a hammer or a piece of fine-grain sandpaper. Today we’ll explore a few of its most common and potent applications.

Dialogue Ducking

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In the beginning, one of the most common uses of a sidechain was a pragmatic one: Automatically reducing the level of music to make room for the human voice.

Today, most engineers mixing films and pre-recorded TV shows are likely to use volume automation to ride music levels, but sidechaining can still be handy, especially in live broadcast or event situations where music must make way for commentary.

Using a sidechain in this way is pretty simple. Just strap a compressor across your music track, and set it with a fairly low threshold, high ratio, a fast attack and a long release time. But, instead of the compressor reacting to fluctuations in the music, you’ll use the sidechain input to force the compressor to react to your dialogue tracks instead.

This way, whenever a voice enters the scene, the music is brought down, hard. If you set your release long enough, the background music will stay down between words and phrases, automatically making way for extended narration.

Vocal Mixing

This isn’t the only way to use a sidechain to make way for the human voice. In dense pop production, some mixers like to use much more subtle version of this setup to clear space for a lead vocal.

In this scenario you’d likely want to go with a lower ratio and a faster release, so that the competing bits of music duck ever-so-slightly, almost imperceptibly, and then come back up to full volume rather quickly.

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Instead of using your vocal track to trigger a compressor that’s strapped across the entire of the music mix, you might target just an instrument or two that want to stay loud between vocal lines, but step just outside the spotlight whenever the singer makes an entrance. With a fast enough release, you can even set your compressor to let go in-between notes or phrases.

The goal with this approach is not to hear the music ducking, but to hear the vocal come through unobstructed – while leaving competing elements at an appropriately loud level in between. This can make for a subtly different effect than volume automation, as the volume dips and swells breathe with the rhythm of the voice. It can sometimes sound a bit more refined than automation, and it’s usually a little less tedious, too.

Punching Through a Pad

One of the other most common ways to use a sidechain compressor in a music mix is to allow fleeting instrumental elements to penetrate through lush synths, string pads, or ever-present guitar tracks.

There are times where you may find that there’s an unacceptable tradeoff between crafting string pads and similar sounds to sound appropriately full, impressive and thick, and keeping them from obscuring other parts. In these cases, you can slap a compressor onto the instrument in question, and use a sidechain to trigger that compressor whenever the instrument it is masking is makes an appearance.

This way, you can give supporting sounds the expansive feel they deserve, and also let a fleeting instrumental element poke through, whether it’s an arpeggiated guitar, a busy bassline or the crack of a snare.

Clearing Room For The Kick

Perhaps the most common application — particularly in music with electronic elements — is to use a sidechain compressor to let the kick drum to punch a little hole right through a bassline. To do this, simply insert your compressor on the bass, and use a bus to send your kick drum signal into the sidechain input.

Whether it’s a deep and viscous synth bassline or a super-busy bass guitar pattern, you can be quite subtle with this technique and still have it pay dividends. In some contexts, this approach can be far more powerful than EQing a kick drum to help it cut through the track. This way, there’s no need to compromise on the low end or to sculpt an overly “clicky” kick sound in order to let it poke through.

Letting it Pump

Of course there’s no law that says you have to be subtle. Whole genres of music have become obsessed with the radical use of this effect.

Set your ratio a little higher, your threshold a little lower, and your release a little longer, and you can with a kick drum sound reminiscent of the ones popularized by French house groups around the turn of the millennium. For an especially dramatic effect, don’t just use the sidechain to compress the bass track – You can use it to influence a compressor strapped across the entire mix.

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