Well that's a good idea too and sometimes an option. In the case of certain transients, pulling the volume down can sound just a brutal as hitting it too hard with a limiter if the volume envelope shape isn't just right - gain reduction is sometimes too obvious in both cases.RandyHancock wrote: How about automating the volume on the offending track?
One thing I would try then, with the volume envelope, is to make a slightly more gradual slope ahead of the transient (we're talking some double-digit milliseconds here I think) and trying to figure out a reasonable volume envelope decay (release) so the ear doesn't notice. The same thing (I think) can be accomplished by a compressor with a Knee by getting some look-ahead 'breathing room' and automating the Knee so it gradually increases and by the time the transient begins to poke its head out above the detectors' radar we're already applying compression. Then the automation dials the knee back down to the normal setting. The threshold could be automated too I think but I believe that would be more noticable.
Just tossing out some ideas here - I haven't had much experience with volume envelopes for transients but with compressorss & limiters I can usually get about 6 or 7 dB of gain reduction before my ear starts to hear the artifacts. I'll have to see how big of a transient I can push down with a volume envelope. Sometimes they can be over 12dB - which is a recording mistake in most cases.
For this kind of transient 'repair' or smoothing I use a compressor in 'limit' mode so there's is no increase in gain of the lower level signals - just limiting at a lower compressor ratio like 5:1 or 10:1. Voxengo Polysquasher and Kjaerhus GPP1 (Golden Peak Pressor) are the usual candidates although someone mentioned one here today - Euphonic and the GVST comp that I haven't tried yet.
Good idea about automation of volume envelopes, and compressor control too in certain cases I think!
How large of a volume spike do you usually push down using envelopes?
Thanks!

