NoSpin wrote:seems like alot of "dance" music genres shouldnt really be affected by this,,, theyre supposed to be loud... techno/house.... dont think theres meant to be a lot of dynamics...
Well, there's bass drops and breakdowns for a start.
But there are other issues with it that can mess up dubstep as much as they can mess up rock. Firstly, when this sort of squashing gets serious you start to get audible distortion which makes the music pretty unpleasant to listen to over an extended period of time.
Secondly, excessive compression messes with your ability to make different bits of the bar louder or quieter (a process known as 'rhythm'), since every ghost hit or unaccented note or dropout is (as far as a compressor can tell) a wasted opportunity to make something louder. I've heard DnB tunes that have been so multiband-squeezed that all the drum hits come out sounding pretty much identical, and the whole thing just goes TAK-TAK-TAK-TAK-TAK-TAK-TAK-TAK-TAK-TAK-TAK-TAK-TAK-TAK-TAK at 180bpm forever.
I guess a third problem is that producers tend to get so bogged down in optimizing the settings on their multiband compressors that they forget about minor points like actually doing anything musically interesting. Which reminds me - the whole arms race thing only really becomes a big problem if your tune sounds exactly like the previous one but a bit louder or a bit quieter. So there's a fairly simple way to sidestep it...