Minimal Audio has been very busy lately, and here they are with another brand new release, Fuse Compressor.
Fuse Compressor is a dynamic sculpting effect that provides up to six bands of dual compression. Dual compression means that each band allows you to apply downward and upward compression, set downward and upward thresholds, and use them to squeeze your dynamic range with precision.
In typical Minimal Audio fashion, the aim of the Fuse Compressor isn’t just to provide an excellent multi-band processing tool but also to simplify the concept in the application.
Applying common effects, like OTT compression in electronic music, is often a convoluted and time-consuming process. However, Fuse Compressor, with its intuitive interface, allows you to macro control all bands simultaneously, which will be a real timesaver.
Of course, it’s not just about the time you save; it’s about staying in your creative flow (at the risk of sounding incredibly cheesy). Tweaking parameters is fun when you’re in exploration mode, but it kills enthusiasm when it becomes tedious to do simple things.
The intuitive interface relies on meaningful visual feedback and simple yet flexible controls.
You can select up to six bands at once, and you’ll see everything going on with each band on the main graph section of the GUI. The plugin has a handy Responsive Gain Display that indicates real-time gain scaling for each band.
Valuable visual feedback continues with two spectrograms displaying the input and output signals. Having real-time feedback that clearly identifies the impact of the plugin and the difference from one setting to the next makes it easier to make the right creative choices faster.
One of the main benefits of the Fuse Compressor’s macro controls is the ability to adjust attack and release times across all bands using the Adaptive Time function.
With Adaptive Time, positive settings mean higher frequency bands respond faster, and lower ones respond slower. This approach allows you to alter the character of the compression without the need to set parameters per band.
Next to the Adaptive Time section, you have controls to adjust the Threshold and Ratio for Downward and Upward compression on all bands simultaneously. If you want to adjust all bands simultaneously without being quite so blunt, you can take more of a fine-tuning approach using the Tilt knob.
The spectral Tilt function slopes the bands by tilting the intensity of the compression towards higher or lower frequencies.
You can make individual adjustments per band, so you aren’t limited and can be as surgical as you like. But the macro controls enhance the overall workflow significantly and do most of the work in getting where you want to be or very close to it.
The plugin has a range of presets for processing drums, leads, pads, etc.
Fuse Compressor also offers Mid-Side Mode, Channel Link, and a Wet/Dry slider for a parallel compression effect.
If you haven’t tried Minimal Audio plugins yet, check out Morph EQ and Rift, too.
You can hear examples of the Fuse Compressor in use in the walkthrough video. Still, as good as it sounds, the thing I love most is Minimal Audio’s continued quest to eliminate distractions to creativity.
Fuse Compressor is available in AU, VST, VST3, and AAX formats for macOS and Windows.
Buy: Fuse Compressor by Minimal Audio ($49)
The Giveaway
Minimal Audio kindly offers one FREE copy of Fuse Compressor for one lucky BPB reader.
To enter the giveaway, please answer the following question in the comments section below: What mixing technique was the hardest for you to learn?
We will randomly pick three comments and announce the lucky winners on this page on August 1st, 2023.
Good luck, everyone, and a big THANK YOU to Minimal Audio for sponsoring the giveaway!
The winner is SBTT. Congratulations (please check your inbox to receive the prize).
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372 Comments
Michael
onWhen to say “enough is enough”
Stephen
onThe hardest mixing technique for me is getting lower male vocals to sit in a mix with a lot of low end information already. I’ve lost considerable amounts of hair over it.
Aaron
onI’d say probably compression overall.
Jaime Lopes
onLike many have said, I still feel like I’m learning EQ… but I guess what I mean by that is that I’m learning how something should sound tonally… vs what it should sound like in the mix…
You could say I’m still learning how to level balance the frequencies :)
Seb-Y?
onIn my opinion finding my own style of mixing
JoMusic
onMultiband compression and sidechaining
Alexander
onDynamic Eq and mid size
Ryan Ross
onTruly hearing 1db of compression
John Ghadimi
onBy far, the most elusive concept / method in mixing is truly understanding what compression does and not necessarily how to do it. It’s a combination of “feeling” and hearing. It took me a while to understand the effects of compression and of course, learning how to achieve the results via sought after compressor plugins. Once you understand compression, the rest is gravy :)
adam
onHardest mixing technique for me has been the right amount of compression in a given situation and which compressor type would be best.
Ioannis Mermigkas
onMid side compression
Patty Cigs
onAppropriately-enough, compression gave me the most trouble. I just had trouble hearing the changes for the longest time until it clicked
Ryan Martin
onLearning that compression is a tool with many uses. But the big one mainly is that not everything needs compression (especially determined by the genre you are mixing). Some genres don’t even need any compression, while others go OTT with everything.
Compressors are an amazing tool, but used too much can make a mix sound flat, regardless of the attack and release settings.
A tip I wished I knew sooner, I started out assuming every good mix used compression (to proper taste), but in all reality not everything needs compression to sound good (although it is an absolutely necessary tool to understand).
sp
onfrequency masking
Anton
onVocal Tuning
Pat Jackman
onOh, compression without a doubt!
Gustaw
ondefinitely effective eq-ing
drobertbaker
onCompression
Sumit P
onHow to keep the vocals upfront and bright, without being harsh.
Marko Gojic
onAll aspects of compression.
D.
onapplying compression to meet its original purpose, not to “make it loud”.
Simone Hmz
onAbsolutely: balancing mixes, requires time, experience and a decent ear :)
Indrajit
onSetting the right threshold, attack, release, and ratio settings to control dynamics while maintaining a natural sound is the most challenging for me to learn.
Alessandro
onUndoubtedly the multiband compressor, having control of this tool makes all the difference
Alex
onMid-side compression
Rainer Kremser
onmultiband compression on underwater sounds
Simon
onRadio-ready quality and correct stereo width.
Giovanni
onResonance removal.
yuri
onCompression.. duh 😭
misha uchenick
onHello! Equalization. Eliminate unwanted artifacts in the recording without compromising the useful signal.
Judah Wyman
onHardest technique to learn wasn’t a specific technique but sound design and how to create my own unique sound and samples to use. Still learning it but consistently getting better at it.
Vinícius Lessa
onSidechain, it was a kinda hard concept to comprehend and apply within a specific DAW.
Rich
onThe hardest for me to learn was compression and I believe the reason it was so hard was because of the hype and the pressure placed on the process. Ppl made it sound like it was the end all and if you can’t get it right your track would suck. It didn’t help when learn on analog either, digital compressors and plugins with detailed gui made me go ‘so this is what all the hype is about? It ain’t that serious! Then you have those that go… oh you NEED to have an 1176 on your drums or your track will suck! Lol
Ivan Grigorov
onCompression
Christian martinez
onI see many saying the mid side is weird, that was very easy for me, on the other hand, the reverbs were the most difficult for me
Matt K
onTurning off the producer brain, and listening like a normal listener.
Hans Vos
onmixing
Peter Teipe
onDefinitely Mastering tracks in a DAW environment and getting them to sound consistent across different playback systems.
Patrick
onGlueing the vocals into the ix
Quet0
onMid-Side Dynamics
mamonulabs
onMultiband Compression in a way that doesnt end in tears
Thomas
onCompression
Johnny Yesno
onCompression
Cody
onBalance the range of frequencies of each track instrument, such as where to cut and where to leav
Adriano
onlearning how to hear compression :)
Julen
onLearning how and when to use compression
Hakan Kuralay
onVocal Compression and Saturation
Rob
onControl of bass frequencies.
Si
onTranslation
CJ Johnson
onCompressing Vocals
Derrick
onLa compresión en general, no tenia muy claro el porque se usaba, que podía ofrecer y dar a los sonidos.
Roman
onStill wrapping my head around compression but more having to do with different situations and different purposes.
mm
onSetting up the mix space :0
Paulo Roberto Leite
onManter os graves bem comportados na mixagem.
Tony
onGetting maximum output volume without squashing all the tracks into a big mess of frequencies and noise.
Esteve Corbera
onAutomation techniques
JP
onVocals
Andrew
onCompression by far the most difficult to conceptualize. Auto volume control?! Also by far the most useful! Thanks BPB and minimal!
Constantino
onCompression
Aleksander
onCompression remains my weakness point.
Je Christian
onComplementary EQ moves. When my ears were inexperienced enough not to know what to cut/boost, changing the frequencies in two different EQs whenever something wasn’t working felt like such an imposition that it was easy to find excuses not to bother (despite how much of a difference it ~can~ make).
Edgar Fiugeroa
onWhat mixing technique was the hardest for you to learn? to give presence to a track with out loosing the quality of the sound.
Aj
onThis being my hobby I’d say all of them cause I understand the concepts but I don’t have enough experience to understand how to apply them in the all the possible situations.
Scott
onTrusting my ears over my eyes…
SAI
onI have been mixing for 20 years now and still can’t get a satisfactory reverb feel. Sometimes it works, but depending on the arrangement, it can be very time consuming. The same goes for EQ and comp. Mixing is a very deep process. So I am very interested in this plug-in.With love from Japan!
Gustavo Koshikumo
onmid-side compression, still learning
#Iwanttheplugin
yiquoc
oncompression
Valeri Velikov
onMid-side compression and dynamic compression too
James
onI just use my ears.
Eric
onCymbal bleed in my tom mics (Audio Technica Pro35R). I’m 5′ 7″ and without long arms. I’m having trouble with unwanted cymbal frequencies from my ole Paiste Full Crash Sound Formulas. Maybe I need to get new mics and/or cymbals.
Vik
onBrauerizing didn’t come easy)
Edwin
onMulti band compression
Dee
onMid Side Stuff….
Xaither
onCompression is definitely a rabbit whole that’s hard to
Xaither
on*Comprehend
emre babus
onWould love to get this plug since I am broke atm. Good luck everyone.
Marco
onAll techniques!
Isaiah
onI think for me the hardest mixing technique to learn was the Andrew Scheps parallel pultec sandwich. as you can never get it spot on. I’ve gone back to using Slate Digital’s fresh air tbh haha.
Patrick W.
on– What mixing technique was the hardest for you to learn?
Parallel compression
Gaëtan
onCompression in general
Burak Urgay
onUsing busses while mixing
James A Manno
onDefinitely Mid side techniques
James A Manno
onDefinitely Mid-side compression and like techniques
Monk
onMid-Side processing
Mike
onHonestly, EQ was toughest for me, I always either overdid or underdid it, and had to tame my best friends’ EQ racks as well when I helped him mix his first album haha
Chris
onUsing audio buses to condense mixing
Marcus
onseparation and parallel compression
Al F
onAlways a Minimal Audio fan
AK
onI am still trying to master compression. This VST looks awesome!!
Wes gardner
onWell as I’m still trying to get a “good” mix I would have to say at the moment frequency masking is something I’m really focused on. It confused me at first thinking that a sound masked another sound because it had similar frequencies. Then I realize it’s a frequency that is loud enough to make it hard to hear other frequencies. Some times we focus so hard on so many things at one we over do it and miss the concept entirely.
Denys
onAt the moment, what I am trying to achieve is to improve my skills in building a good soundstage
Ray Nielsen
onI don’t think I’m going to be original, but it’s compression.
Lee Morgan
onBalance
Douglas
onUsing Reverb & Delay correctly to get a uniform space.
MJ
onBalancing low end!
Clay LaHatte
onI feel like I struggle to get a mix that sounds controlled yet also open and dynamic.
Jamie Marvel
onThe customer’s taste always wins
Grainemax
onCorrect selection of reverb
Mike
ondifferent styles of compression and where to use them was hardest
Alexander
onMid-side things
Zenith
onI have been struggling with pretty much anything but then a little research helps to make it right.
Chris S
on1st
LM
onCompression for SURE!
Andre L
onVocal EQing
Andre L
onI mean my own vocal EQing:)
Chelo
onmultiband equalization
Mibrilane
onFor me it is a toss-up between compression/expansion and equalization, sorting out the different kinds and when to apply them. It is a never-ending learning process.
Aubrey
onDynamic EQ
Kirk Hilbelink
onCompression
Hetto Vennik
onMultiband Compression!
Marco
onMixing Vocals and keep the dynamic range and also be present on the mix
Nicola
onReverb stacking
Ben Barrington
onLove your blog!!
Sculpting high frequencies and how best to use side chain techniques.
North
onThis looks like it could really inFUSE my music with some extra polish and character! Love BPB!!!
Brock
onCompression is my problem
Thomas
onMaking a mix feel overall cohesive (gluey) while retaining headroom. Mostly automation and compression go hand in hand here, and ironically it feels like every once in a while you have to relearn what you might have already done succesfully in the past just by actually listening and was messing up later cause you were chasing something you thought was even better.
sacaan
onThe most difficult thing has been knowing how far to compress so that your mix is not ruined in the master
Peter
onCool!
Matt
onThe creative aspect of transferring the listener with the emotion and space of the song to another world, and it feel 3d like its a physical weighted object and not a piece of paper, flat and no color.
Alexey
onReverb and 8.1
Ridoki
onConstrasting the layers of the instruments
Momo
onBalancing and achieving good sounding lows.
Davis Hill
onWell, learning to hear compression actually. Three years in and I’m still working on it.
aIJo
onMaking my own wavetable.
TMTwo
onClean and powerfull reverbs on my sound.
James
onDefinitely creating space in the mix for all the parts – panning, eq and a bit of everything is needed to find the balance!
Weird Jesus
onCompression
Matt
onVocal mixing
Alex
onCompression.
Aleksandr
onMid Side Compression/ Dynamic eq
Mo'
onNot to overcomplicate a mix… this gives clarity
Reinhard Reschner
onThe hardest thing was to get the right frequence balance
Alex
onStacking pan-voices
Fabio
oncompression parameters