I think what that poster is trying to allude to is the bit of compression that can come with Saturation as some peaky peaks are absorbed - essentially clipping. This means that you may get another dB or so before it moves from Saturation to Splaturation.ramseysounds wrote: Thu Jan 01, 2026 6:09 pmHow?DCrown wrote: Mon Dec 29, 2025 12:09 pm …reduce the level nominal level of a track and making it even louder at the same time, making the perceived level louder.
The perceived level, or more accurately Presence, can also rise as the added distortion overtones brighten the signal. In effect, this moves the perception of the signal up as the signal now has more energy in a higher register, which is where us nasty little humanses hear best.
What a good Mix Engineer knows (either technically or by instinct) is that to work widely, music should be mixed to the middle (ie not the sub bass and supersonic hi hatz). Saturation is one tool in that process.