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Parallel Compression Explained

By Doctor Mix • March 3, 2024

Discovering parallel compression was a big “a-ha” moment for me. It was a moment that forever changed the way I mix.

Today, I’ll save you a significant amount of time by sharing the single biggest epiphany I had about music mixing. Let me explain how traditional compression works:


Simple Compression Diagram

In this configuration, the compressor brings down the highest peaks of the sound (I’ve used vocals in this diagram, but it can be anything) to reduce the dynamic range of the signal.

This “downward” type of compression has its legitimate and often mandatory uses in many areas of the mix. However, it can also sound obvious and unnatural, especially where aggressive compression settings are used.

In other words, as useful as it is, traditional compression always takes something away from the original sound. And that something is lost forever. Now, here’s how PARALLEL COMPRESSION works:


Parallel Compressor Diagram

With this configuration, the original sound is left untouched and routed straight into the Master Bus.

At the same time, the original channel is “sent” to an auxiliary channel (also called an Aux or FX channel, depending on your system), which is practically an exact copy of the original sound running in “parallel.”

Compression is then applied to this auxiliary channel, typically using much more aggressive settings.

This is an “upward” type of compression because the treated signal adds to the original sound, rather than taking away from it.

Because the parallel channel is heavily compressed, you can always hear the quietest passages, making every detail of the sound more audible, more crisp, and more evident.

In other words, parallel compression results in a sound that is more solid, more assertive, and more powerful.

Want to know the best news about it? It works on everything: Drums, Bass, Vocals, Keyboards, Guitars, Percussion… and the Mix Bus!!

Stereo Audio Waveform



How to Set It Up

Take your source channel — the bass guitar, the snare drum, the vocal, whatever you’re working on — and create a pre-fader send to an auxiliary channel.

On the aux, put a compressor. Set it aggressively: high ratio, low threshold. You’re deliberately squashing the life out of it. That’s the point. Don’t be afraid.

Route both channels — the original and the aux — to the same bus or directly to your main output. Then blend the aux channel up slowly until you start hearing it fill in underneath.

One thing: go pre-fader on that send. That way, if you later adjust the fader on your original channel, it doesn’t change how much signal is hitting the compressor. The two signals stay independent. You want to control each one separately. More presence? Raise the compressed channel 2dB. That’s it.

Parallel Compression on Bass

This is where I first fell in love with the technique.

My go-to for bass is the Waves CLA-76 — a model of the classic UREI 1176. It’s not transparent. It adds harmonics, texture, and character to the sound. Run it hard and it starts to distort in a musical way, adding substance to the low end.

As a direct compressor on the bass channel, that character can be too much — it can overpower the sound. But as a parallel signal, blended underneath the clean bass? That’s exactly what you want. Just enough to add weight and presence without losing the original tone.

Try it: set an aggressive ratio on the CLA-76, fast release, and drive the input hard. Solo the parallel channel — it should sound almost ridiculous. Then bring it up underneath your clean bass signal until the bass starts to feel solid and present. You’ll hear the moment it clicks.

Parallel Compression on Drums

The classic application, and for good reason.

On a snare that sounds thin or lacks aggression, parallel compression can transform it. I like the Waves H-Compressor for this — good attack control, and the “Punch” feature makes a noticeable difference. High ratio, threshold down, adjust the attack until the snare starts coming alive. Solo the parallel channel and listen — it should sound punchy and aggressive. Then blend it back under the original snare until it sounds bigger in the context of the mix.

For the kick drum, the attack time is everything. A fast attack (1–5ms) means the compressor catches the transient — less click, less punch. A slower attack (18–67ms) lets the transient through — more click, more impact. Aim for around 3dB of gain reduction on the compressed channel, then match the output gain so your levels stay consistent when you bypass.

On the drum bus, I often reach for an SSL G Bus Compressor — especially on real drums in a rock or pop context. 2:1 ratio, fairly fast release, and no more than 2–3dB of gain reduction. It’s more about glue than control.

Parallel Compression on Vocals

Ever felt your lead vocals getting drowned out in the mix during those powerful moments? Simply turning up the volume isn’t always the answer.

Create a parallel track with a heavily compressed version of your lead vocals. Then subtly blend it into your mix just when you need that extra push. This technique doesn’t just add presence — it injects character and saves precious headroom, letting your vocals stand out without overwhelming the mix.

What I’ll typically do: a levelling compressor on the main vocal channel — something Neve-style, like the UAD Precision Compressor — to handle the big dynamic swings. Then a parallel channel with a CLA-76, heavy compression and gritty character, blended underneath.

The main channel stays controlled and natural. The parallel layer fills in the quiet moments and adds body. The vocal gets a floor — nothing gets lost.

If you start hearing too many breath sounds and mouth noises creeping up through the parallel blend, just pull the parallel fader back a touch. That usually does it.



Just One Word of Warning:

Ensure that your DAW can handle plugin (or analogue insert) latency correctly. Run tests to verify that there is no delay between the treated sound and the original sound, or you’ll end up with unwanted phase issues.

Now you can go ahead and use Parallel Compression as much as you want. And the more you use it, the happier you will become… as a mixer, anyway 🙂

Learn More:

Check out this article: Parallel Compression on Wikipedia

Here are a few videos where I demonstrate parallel compression:

Parallel Compression: Kick & Snare With The Distressor

EXTREME Parallel Compression!

For the complete guide to these techniques and more, check out The Official Guide for Mixing.

Love,
Claudio & The Doctor Mix Team