Public spaces Compression is often applied in audio systems for restaurants, retail, and similar public environments that play background music at a relatively low volume and need it compressed, not just to keep the volume fairly constant, but also to make quiet parts of the music audible over ambient noise. Compression can increase average output gain of a
power amplifier by 50 to 100% with a reduced dynamic range. For paging and evacuation systems, this adds clarity under noisy circumstances and saves on the number of amplifiers required.
Music production Compression is often used in music production to make instruments more consistent in dynamic range, so that they "sit" more nicely in the mix with the other instruments (neither disappear during short periods of time, nor overpower the other instruments during short periods). In
electronic dance music, side-chaining is often used on
basslines, controlled by the kick drum or a similar percussive trigger, to prevent the two from conflicting, and provide a pulsating, rhythmic dynamic to the sound.
Voice A compressor can be used to reduce
sibilance ('ess' sounds) in vocals (
de-essing) by feeding the compressor's side-chain an
equalized version of the input signal, so that specific, sibilance-related frequencies (typically 4000 to 8000 hz) activate the compressor more. Compression is used in voice communications in
amateur radio that employ
single-sideband (SSB) modulation to make a particular station's signal more readable to a distant station, or to make one's station's transmitted signal stand out against others. This is applicable especially in
DXing. An SSB signal's strength depends on the level of
modulation. A compressor increases the average level of the modulation signal thus increasing the transmitted signal strength. Most modern amateur radio SSB transceivers have speech compressors built-in. Compression is also used in
land mobile radio, especially in transmitted audio of professional
walkie-talkies and
remote control dispatch consoles.
Broadcasting Compression is used extensively in
broadcasting to boost the perceived volume of sound while reducing the dynamic range of source audio. To avoid
overmodulation, broadcasters in most countries have legal limits on instantaneous peak volume they may broadcast. Normally these limits are met by permanently inserted compression hardware in the on-air chain. Broadcasters use compressors in order that their station sounds louder than comparable stations. The effect is to make the more heavily compressed station jump out at the listener at a given volume setting. This is not limited to inter-channel differences; they also exist between programme material within the same channel. Loudness differences are a frequent source of audience complaints, especially TV commercials and promos that seem too loud. The
European Broadcasting Union (EBU) has been addressing this issue in the EBU PLOUD group, which consists of over 240 audio professionals, many from broadcasters and equipment manufacturers. In 2010, the EBU published
EBU R 128 which introduces a new way of metering and
normalizing audio. The Recommendation uses
ITU-R BS.1770 loudness metering. , several European TV stations have announced their support for the new norm and over 20 manufacturers have announced products supporting the new
EBU Mode loudness meters. To help audio engineers understand what loudness range their material consists of (e.g. to check if some compression may be needed to fit it into the channel of a specific delivery platform), the EBU also introduced the
Loudness Range (LRA) descriptor.
Marketing Most television commercials are heavily compressed to achieve near-maximum perceived loudness while staying within permissible limits. This causes a problem that TV viewers often notice: when a station switches from minimally compressed program material to a heavily compressed commercial, the volume sometimes seems to increase dramatically. Peak loudness might be the same—meeting the letter of the law—but high compression puts much more of the audio in the commercial at close to the maximum allowable, making the commercial seem much louder.
Over-usage " by
The Beatles mastered on CD four times since 1983 Record companies, mixing engineers and mastering engineers have been gradually increasing the overall
loudness of commercial albums. This is achieved by using higher degrees of compression and limiting during
mixing and
mastering; compression algorithms have been engineered specifically to accomplish the task of maximizing audio level in the digital stream. Hard limiting or
clipping can result, affecting the tone and timbre of the music. The effort to increase loudness has been referred to as the
loudness war.
Other uses Noise reduction systems use a compressor to reduce the dynamic range of a signal for transmission or recording, expanding it afterward, a process called
companding. This reduces the effects of a channel or recording medium with limited dynamic range.
Instrument amplifiers often include compression circuitry to prevent sudden high-wattage peaks that could damage the speakers.
Electric bass players often use compression effects, either
effects units available in pedal,
rackmount units, or built-in devices in bass amps, to even out the sound levels of their
basslines.
Gain pumping, where a regular amplitude peak (such as a kick drum) causes the rest of the mix to change in volume due to the compressor, is generally avoided in music production. However, many
dance and hip-hop musicians purposefully use this phenomenon, causing the mix to alter in volume rhythmically in time with the beat.
Hearing aids use a compressor to bring the audio volume into the listener's hearing range. To help the patient perceive the direction sound comes from, some hearing aids use
binaural compression. Compressors are also used for
hearing protection in some electronic active hearing protection
earmuffs and
earplugs, to let sounds at ordinary volumes be heard normally while attenuating louder sounds, possibly also amplifying softer sounds. This allows, for example, shooters wearing hearing protection at a shooting range to converse normally, while sharply attenuating the much louder sounds of the gunshots, and similarly for musicians to hear quiet music but be protected from loud noises such as drums or cymbal crashes. In applications of machine learning where an algorithm is training on audio samples, dynamic range compression is a way to augment samples for a larger data set. == Limiting ==