Learn

Audio Compressor Attack and Release Explained

Attack and release control the timing of a compressor: how quickly it starts reducing loud audio and how quickly it lets go afterward. These settings often decide whether compression sounds smooth, punchy, flat, or distracting.

Finish with file compressionAttack and release affect timing and feel. For smaller downloads or uploads, use browser-based file compression after editing your sound.
Compress Exported Audio

What Is Attack?

Attack is the time it takes for the compressor to begin reducing gain after the signal crosses the threshold. A fast attack reacts almost immediately, catching sharp peaks before they pass through. A slower attack lets the first edge of the sound through before compression takes over.

This matters because the first moment of a sound often carries clarity and impact. On drums, that first hit is the transient. On voice, it can be a consonant, a sudden laugh, or a hard word. If attack is too fast, a source can lose punch and feel smaller. If attack is too slow, peaks may slip through and still sound uncontrolled.

What Is Release?

Release is the time it takes for the compressor to stop reducing gain after the signal falls back below the threshold. A short release recovers quickly, which can keep speech lively but may create audible level movement. A long release recovers slowly, which can sound smooth but may keep the audio suppressed into the next word or beat.

Too fast release can cause pumping, where background sound rises and falls after every loud moment. Too slow release can make audio feel flattened because the compressor never fully resets before the next phrase. Release is usually tuned by listening to the rhythm of the source, not by copying a fixed number.

Fast vs Slow Attack

Attack speed changes the front edge of the sound. If the source has sharp peaks that hurt the listener or overload the next processor, use a faster attack. If the source needs punch, pick detail, or natural speech articulation, use a slower attack and control peaks with threshold and ratio first.

Attack speedSound characterCommon use
Fast attack, 0.1-5 msTight, controlled, less transient punchSharp vocal peaks, aggressive control, safety before limiting
Medium attack, 5-20 msBalanced and practicalPodcast voice, streaming mic, many vocals
Slow attack, 20-50 ms or morePunchier, more open, more transient detailDrums, acoustic guitar, expressive vocals, mix bus

Fast vs Slow Release

Release speed changes how the compressor breathes with the performance. The best release often returns close to zero gain reduction between phrases or beats without making the level wobble. If the gain reduction meter snaps back constantly, listen for pumping. If it barely returns, listen for dullness.

Release speedSound characterCommon use
Fast release, 20-80 msEnergetic, can be lively or pumpyQuick speech, drums, sources with short peaks
Medium release, 80-200 msNatural recovery for many sourcesPodcast, voice-over, streaming microphone, vocals
Slow release, 200 ms and aboveSmooth but potentially flattenedBass, music bus, slower material, gentle leveling

Starter Attack and Release Settings

Use these ranges as a first pass, then adjust against the actual recording. Timing interacts with threshold and ratio, so a setting that works at 2:1 may feel too heavy at 6:1.

SourceAttackReleaseGoal
Podcast voice10-20 ms80-150 msStable words without dull consonants
Vocal5-30 ms80-200 msControl peaks while keeping expression
Drums10-30 ms for punch, faster for peak control50-150 msShape impact and room energy
Bass15-40 ms120-300 msEven notes without distortion or wobble
Streaming mic5-15 ms70-140 msCatch sudden loud moments while staying conversational
Background music20-50 ms150-300 msGentle leveling under speech

How Attack and Release Cause Pumping

Pumping happens when compression changes level in a way the listener notices as movement rather than natural dynamics. A loud word may pull down the room tone, then the release brings it back up between words. In music, a kick drum may duck the entire track so the mix swells after each hit.

To reduce pumping, first check whether the compressor is working too hard. A lower ratio, higher threshold, or less makeup gain may solve the problem before timing changes. If release is snapping back too quickly, slow it down. If the compressor stays down too long, shorten release or raise threshold so it has room to recover.

  • Reduce ratio if the gain reduction feels too obvious.
  • Raise threshold if compression is active all the time.
  • Slow release when level movement is chattering between words or beats.
  • Adjust makeup gain so quieter noise is not exaggerated after compression.

Attack and Release vs File Compression

Attack and release affect timing and feel. They do not directly decide file size. You can tune a voice beautifully with compressor timing and still export a very large file if you choose WAV, high sample rate, or a high bitrate.

For smaller downloads or uploads, use browser-based file compression after editing your sound. The Audio Compressor can reduce MB using bitrate, format, and target size, while the Audio Compressor vs Limiter page explains where timing overlaps with peak safety.

Attack and release affect timing and feel. For smaller downloads or uploads, use browser-based file compression after editing your sound.

FAQ

What is attack in audio compression?

Attack is how quickly the compressor starts reducing gain after audio crosses the threshold. Fast attack catches peaks; slow attack preserves more transient detail.

What is release in audio compression?

Release is how quickly the compressor stops reducing gain after the signal falls back below the threshold. It controls the recovery feel.

What attack setting is good for voice?

A practical voice starting range is about 5-20 ms. Go faster for sharp peaks and slower if the voice loses clarity or sounds dull.

What release setting sounds natural?

For many speech recordings, 80-150 ms is a useful starting range. The best release recovers between phrases without pumping.

Why does my compressor pump?

Pumping often comes from too much gain reduction, release that is too fast, threshold too low, ratio too high, or makeup gain that raises background noise.

Should attack be fast or slow?

Use fast attack for peak control and slow attack for punch or natural transients. Medium attack is a safe starting point for many voices.

Do attack and release change file size?

No. They shape dynamics and timing. File size is controlled by bitrate, format, duration, sample rate, channels, and target-size export.