Quick Answer
Add saturation before compression so the compressor is shaping a bass with harmonics already present. Choose the saturation type based on whether the bass needs body, bite, or smooth warmth.
Overview
Saturation as a Translation Tool
Saturation before compression means a more harmonically complete signal going into the level-control stage. The compressor then shapes a bass that already translates — it does not have to create that translation itself.
The right saturation type matters. Tape warmth, drive, and clipper-style density all produce different harmonic profiles suited to different bass characters.
Step by Step
Processing Order
Choose the saturation type before applying it: tape warmth, drive, or clipper-style density.
Apply saturation at low levels and verify on small speakers.
Compress after saturation so the compressor responds to the fully formed harmonic picture.
Plugin Examples
What to Use and Why
Audiopunks SansAmp for direct harmonic bass shaping.
Soundtoys Decapitator for broader saturation that affects the full frequency range.
UADx Studer A800 for tape density on the bass bus.
Stock Logic Alternatives
No Third-Party Plugins? No Problem.
Logic Bass Amp Designer for cabinet-style harmonic content.
Logic Phat FX with tube saturation at low drive settings.
Logic Tape Delay for subtle tape tone without adding delay.
Avoid These
Common Mistakes
Adding saturation after compression and then wondering why the compression sounds strange.
Using maximum drive and calling it saturation.
Saturating the bass at the same drive level regardless of source character.