Bass Compressor Settings for Live and Recording

Compression evens out bass dynamics. Learn attack, release, ratio, and threshold settings for slap bass, fingerstyle, and pick playing.

bass, compressor, dynamics, tone, settings

Bass is a dynamic instrument. Some notes jump out louder than others. The low E string has more energy than the high G. Compression smooths these differences for a consistent, professional sound.

What each knob does

  • Threshold: The volume level where compression starts. Set so 3-6 dB of gain reduction shows on average notes.
  • Ratio: How much compression is applied above the threshold. 2:1 to 4:1 for bass. Higher ratios squash the dynamics.
  • Attack: How fast compression engages. Fast (5-10ms) catches the initial transient. Slow (30-50ms) lets the attack through for more punch.
  • Release: How fast compression disengages. Fast (50-100ms) for funk and slap. Medium (100-200ms) for rock. Slow (200ms+) for smooth jazz.

Genre-specific settings

  • Slap: Fast attack, fast release, higher ratio (4:1). Controls the aggressive transients.
  • Fingerstyle rock: Medium attack, medium release, moderate ratio (3:1). Evens out finger dynamics.
  • Pick metal: Fast attack, fast release, higher ratio. Consistent aggression.
  • Jazz: Slow attack, medium release, low ratio (2:1). Transparent compression that preserves dynamics.