As much as I butcher metaphors (and it's almost impossible to talk about sound without using metaphors), I try to avoid thining in terms of "horizontal" or "vertical". These terms have can have different meanings, even within the same conversions. For example - "vertical" could refer to stacking/layering of sounds, frequency spectrum or amplitude. Likewise, "horizontal" could refer to time domain or frequency domain.Uchdryd wrote:1) A filter "squashes" a sound signal horizontally by simply eliminating a range of frequencies, whereas a compressor or limiter "squashes" a sound signal vertically by attenuating the entire frequency spectrum of the sound equally (when it reaches the threshhold), correct?
Having said that, I don't think it's right to say a filter "squashes" part of sound. When a compressor or limiter squashes a louder sound, it changes (or moves/shifts it) into a quieter sound. A high pass filter doesn't do any moving or shifting - it simply (theoretically) removes that part of the sound. To squash the frequency spectrum would require a pitch shifter or mroe advanced FFT processes (which I won't go into here).
A filter can do this if you use it to remove a part of the sound that's contributing a lot to "physical" level but not to "audible" level. Most commonly, this is the case of using a highpass filter to remove rumble from a recording.Uchdryd wrote:2) And by using a filter, you can reduce the physical level of a sound while not noticeably reducing the audible level of that sound, right?
For the purposes of this discussion - correct, except for the "purely analog device" part. There's certainly a lot of digital saturation that can be useful (hard clipping being an extreme example). I work mainly in the digital domain, and I use a few saturation processes that are modelled on or inspired by analogue processes. That doesn't mean it's analogue saturation - it's still digital saturation. It's still mathematical algorithms.Uchdryd wrote:3) Saturation is a purely analog device that's similar in effect to a limiter except that it introduces distortion at peak levels instead of attenuating the sound signal at those peaks, correct?
Also cutting hairs, saturation is not a device, but a technique or process.
Hope that makes sense.
-Kim.