Case Study: Fixing Vocal Compression Clicks and Plugin Order

The Challenge

A client was experiencing one of the most maddening issues in music production and booked a Live Diagnostic Call. He had captured a brilliant vocal performance in Logic Pro—the tone was rich and the delivery was perfect. However, as he built his mix, a subtle but persistent ‘clicking’ or ‘swooshing’ noise appeared at the very beginning of each sung phrase. He scrutinized the raw audio files and confirmed they were completely clean; the noise was being introduced somewhere in his digital processing chain, but the source was a total mystery.

The Amazing Audio Solution

We connected remotely, and using the AudioMovers plugin, I was able to listen to his high-resolution Logic Pro playback through my own studio monitors. My first port of call in these situations is always to investigate the signal path. I examined his vocal plugin chain and immediately spotted the culprit: it wasn’t a faulty plugin, but the order of operations.

  • Diagnosing the Chain: His signal was flowing like this: EQ -> Saturation (Tape Emulation) -> Saturation (ChromaVerb) -> Compressor (LA-2A Emulation).
  • The Root Cause: Every recording has a microscopic ‘noise floor’ (room tone and electronic hiss). Saturation plugins add harmonic richness, but they also pull that background noise floor up to the surface. The compressor at the end of the chain had a slight attack delay (around 30 milliseconds). For that tiny fraction of a second before the compressor clamped down, we were hearing the super-charged, saturated noise floor at full volume. The sudden gain reduction is what created the audible “click” or “swoosh”.
  • Re-ordering the Signal Flow: The fix was elegant and immediate. This wasn’t a case of buying better plugins; it was purely about logical order. We needed to control the dynamics before we enhanced the harmonics. We dragged and dropped the compressor to sit right after the initial corrective EQ, but before any of the saturation effects.

The Result

By simply correcting the plugin order, the problem vanished instantly. The compressor was now acting on a clean signal with a natural noise floor, meaning it didn’t have to clamp down so aggressively. The subsequent saturation stages then enriched a vocal that was already dynamically consistent. The client was left with a smooth, warm vocal completely free of distracting digital artifacts, and a valuable lesson in the “dynamics first, color later” philosophy.

This article was originally published as a field case study on our sister site, Audio Support, and has been adapted for Amazing Audio.

Master Your Plugin Chain

Don’t let incorrect signal flow ruin a perfect vocal take. Let our remote engineers review your DAW setup, optimize your plugin order, and dial in the perfect processing chain for your voice.

Book a Live Diagnostic Call
Accepting Applications

Join the Waiting List

We are currently operating via an exclusive waitlist to ensure every creator gets our full, undivided attention. Tell us about your current audio setup and the technical nightmares holding you back. Our engineers will review your needs and contact you with priority access when a slot opens.
Thanks, ! You’re officially on the list. Keep an eye on your inbox for your confirmation email.