or above the Threshold, the signal is increased in gain. Upward expansion takes more time to adjust because you must try to find the subjectively equal settings of what was done to the sound, and even if you know the “numbers” on the original processor, the numbers really don’t relate from one processor to the next very well.
•Load the Uncompressor preset.
•Notice that all Ranges are set to positive values so that the gains will be increased when the signal goes around or above the Threshold.
•Adjust the Master Threshold for some reasonable expansion.
Now it is important to point out that the attack and release times are absolutely critical to the way the expansion works. In most cases of over compressed material, the peaks and punch have been mightily squashed down, so a fast attack time will help restore these peaks. Longer release times help bring the presence and sustain back into the material.
However, let’s go one step further and suppose that you have a mix that has
Best thing to do in this case is to try to determine if you should use a wideband expander (such as the C1 or Renaissance Compressor). Using a multiband upward expander would be best for situations where specific frequency ranges had been over compressed, such as a mix with too much compression on the bass. Another example would be too much compression on a drum submix and you need to restore the attack of the drums but not the low frequencies, so you could use a mid- and high- frequency upward expander and ignore the lower frequencies.
You can load the Uncompressor and simply Bypass any band you don’t need. Here’s another tip: to bypass a band but still have it available as “EQ”, simply set the Range control to zero and use the Gain control to set the EQ level in that band.