Book Image

The Pro Tools 2023 Post-Audio Cookbook

By : Emiliano Paternostro
Book Image

The Pro Tools 2023 Post-Audio Cookbook

By: Emiliano Paternostro

Overview of this book

Pro Tools has long been an industry-standard Digital Audio Workstation (DAW) for audio professionals, but it can often be overwhelming for new and experienced users alike. The Pro Tools 2023 Post-Audio Cookbook acts as a reference guide to the software and breaks down each stage of a project into manageable phases. From planning a session, editing a sequence, performing a mix to printing the final masters, you can approach this book either sequentially or peruse the self-contained recipes. You’ll come to grips with workflows for music production, motion picture, and spoken word production, helping you gain expertise in the area of your choice. You'll learn aspects of music mixing like side chain processing to keep instruments from overshadowing each other and conforming for motion picture. The author’s expertise with Pro Tools will help you discover and incorporate different techniques into your workflows. You’ll also learn to build consistent and replicable workflows and templates by understanding what happens behind the scenes in Pro Tools. With this cookbook, you’ll be able to focus on the creative aspects of your audio production and not get mired by the technical hurdles. By the end of this book, you’ll be well-equipped to handle even the most complex features of Pro Tools to deliver immaculate results for your clients.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)

Making sounds louder without killing transients with parallel compression

Compression is a great tool to level dynamics and makes things sound louder, but as noted in the previous recipe, in certain situations, you risk losing the transients or first moments of a sound’s attack. For certain instruments, such as percussion, guitars, or pre-mixed beds of music, this can absolutely kill the sound and make it sound dead in comparison. In situations like this, you can use a technique called parallel compression, sometimes also referred to as upward compression. The concept is simple; instead of using a compressor to reduce the peaks of a sound and make up the gain after, you heavily compress a duplicate track (or, in our case, a Send routed to an Aux track) and mix that with the original track. The result is the lowest sounds being brought up without squashing the transients of the original.

Getting ready

For this recipe, you will need a Pro Tools session with an audio track...