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How To Get the Most From Your Compressor Pedal — Part 1
Date:2020/1/3 17:12:50 Hits:
Most guitarists associate compressor pedals with snappy country licks, spanky funk rhythm, and clean, sustained, single-line leads. While these are iconic sounds, compressor pedals can be set up in a variety of ways, making them suprisingly versatile; from subtle to over the top. The aim of this two-part article is to explain how a guitar compressor works from a practical view, highlight some features of compressor pedals, show some tried-and-true compressor uses, and introduce some not-so-obvious ones. This knowledge should help you get the most flexibility and usage from your compressor.
What It Is
How It Works
Many comps have more controls, including Attack, Tone, and Blend. Attack controls how quickly the compression actually happens, which is why a higher setting can give the note a “pop” as you strike it. Tone is often a high-end boost, which is needed to compensate for the fact that compressing the peaks in a signal can make it seem duller; the peaks give off a lot of high-end. Blend allows the compressed signal to be blended with your original, uncompressed sound. This control gives amazing subtlety to compression. No matter how heavily compressed the setting is, the uncompressed sound can be turned up above it. This gives you the best qualities of both at any level. The Wampler Ego and Seymour Duncan Vise Grip have variations on all three of these controls.
More Control
Features and Extras
With a working knowledge of compressors and their options, dialing in appropriate sounds will make sense. In Part 2 and Part 3, I’ll show in detail some typical and not-so-typical compressor settings and uses.
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