Re: compression

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On 2017-12-06 22:39, Glenn English wrote:
I want to compress some audio -- the quiet parts are too quiet for a road trip.

AFAICT, there are 2 compression effects: compand and contast.

Compand doesn't seem to have a ratio param. Contrast isn't explained
in much detail, and it doesn't have much at all in the way of params
anyway.

Can anyone explain to me how to get sox to do a simple compression
with an adjustable compression ratio?

The manual has a specific example of the use of compand, for making music
suitable for listening to in a car.  I'd have thought you could start by
trying the example, then tweaking the settings to suit your music.

In the description of the parameters in that example, it says "sounds in
the range −60dB to 0dB (maximum volume) will be boosted so that the 60dB
dynamic range of the original music will be compressed 3-to-1 into a 20dB range". I presume that the 3:1 ratio and those quoted 60dB & 20dB values
correspond to the "-60" and "-20" parameters in the example.

I guess you might need to use the stat/stats effects to discover the
dynamic range of a piece of music first, to work out eg the values of
the overall gain, if any, to be applied.


As is often the case in sox documentation, it requires a very careful
look at the required and optional parms for the effect, with the example,
to see which parts have been provided.  I found for example when I first
looked at this that I (wrongly) thought that where the description shows
that attack1,decay1 might be followed by attack2,decay2 and on the line below shows that in-dB1,out-dB1 might be followed by in-dB2,out-dB2 that
those two sets of optional second instances of parameters were connected
ie if you had multiple sets of attach,delay, you needed multiple sets of
in&out dBs.

They're not.  Moreover, in the example the 'transfer function' is given
as: 6:−70,−60,−20 and it took me a while to realise that that corresponds to: [soft-knee-dB:]in-dB1[,out-dB1]{,in-dB2,out-dB2} with out-dB1 (as it
says it can be) omitted.  I think the example would have been easier to
understand if it was coded as: 6:−70,-70,−60,−20 (which is what I think
it actually means).   I may well be wrong!

--
Jeremy Nicoll - my opinions are my own

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