Waveform

Hip-Hop typical envelope

EQ Profile

808 Body (60–80 Hz) & Vocal Presence (2–4 kHz)

-15 LUFS

LUFS Target

Deezer integrated

Spectrum

Pink-noise reference

Hip-Hop Mastering for Deezer

Punchy kick, warm 808 bass, vocal presence · Tuned for Deezer playback

Target: -15 LUFS · True Peak: -1 dBTP · Dynamic Range: 7-10 LU

Hip-Hop Mastering Specification. Deezer

ParameterHip-Hop Specification
Loudness Target-15 LUFS integrated (Deezer optimized)
True Peak Ceiling-1 dBTP. Inter-sample peak limit
Dynamic Range7-10 LU LU. Genre-appropriate
EQ Focus808 Body (60–80 Hz) & Vocal Presence (2–4 kHz)
Stereo ImageMono sub below 80 Hz, moderate stereo width
Platform AlgorithmDeezer normalizes to -15 LUFS and also offers Deezer HiFi (FLAC lossless).

Why Hip-Hop on Deezer Needs Specialized Mastering

Hip-hop mastering lives and dies by the 808. The relationship between kick transient and sub-bass sustain is the genre's defining technical challenge. Too much low-end at 60–80 Hz drowns the kick in mud; too little loses the mix's visceral punch. Modern hip-hop productions routinely target -8 LUFS before streaming normalization turns them down, sacrificing dynamic range for zero loudness gain. The correct mastering target preserves the kick's transient attack by keeping a fast-attack limiter above 2 ms. Sidechain compression between kick and 808 is handled at the mix stage, but the mastering chain must ensure this inter-sidechain relationship survives the true peak limiter at -1 dBTP without 808 clipping. Presence peaks at 2–4 kHz determine vocal intelligibility on phone speakers. The primary listening environment for 78% of hip-hop streams. High-frequency content above 12 kHz has diminishing returns: AAC and MP3 encoding attenuates it regardless, making extreme air-band boosts wasteful. A 250–350 Hz cut of 2–3 dB removes muddiness and creates space for the 808 to breathe without touching the kick's fundamental.

Deezer context: Deezer normalizes to -15 LUFS and also offers Deezer HiFi (FLAC lossless). Target -15 LUFS integrated for consistency across standard and HiFi listeners. Deezer's audience includes quality-focused European listeners. Clean masters with good dynamic range perform well.

Hip-Hop × Deezer. The Normalization Math

How -15 LUFS interacts with Hip-Hop's natural loudness window

Hip-Hop's natural -10 to -8 LUFS loudness sits roughly 6.0 dB hotter than Deezer's -15 LUFS target, so the platform turns the master down at playback. The competitive instinct to push to -7 or -8 LUFS for "loudness wars" parity is wasted on Deezer. the platform takes the gain back, and the only result is the dynamic compression you paid for with no perceived loudness benefit. Target -15 LUFS integrated directly and bank the saved dynamic range as punchy with controlled dynamics. The -1 dBTP ceiling specified for Deezer prevents inter-sample peaks from clipping during the codec's reconstruction filter, which is especially relevant for Hip-Hop's 60-100 Hz sub-bass content where high-amplitude transients accumulate against the limiter.

Codec Reality for Hip-Hop on Deezer

Deezer delivers FLAC / MP3 at 1411 kbps HiFi / 320 kbps standard, which preserves the full frequency response of your master without the artifacts (8-10 kHz on the 320 kbps tier) that show up on lower-bitrate platforms. For Hip-Hop, this means the 60-100 Hz sub-bass and 2-4 kHz vocal presence content survives transmission cleanly. The mastering decisions you make in the studio are the decisions the listener hears, with no codec to hide behind. Master conservatively and trust the dynamics. The dynamic-range character of Hip-Hop (punchy with controlled dynamics, 7-10 LU) interacts with this codec tier specifically: preserve the dynamics, the platform will reward them.

Hip-Hop EQ Profile for Deezer

EQ 01

Low-end: Tight high-pass at 30–40 Hz to remove rumble. Keep 60–80 Hz full for kick body.

EQ 02

Mid-low: Small 2–3 dB cut at 250–350 Hz to reduce muddiness and let the 808 breathe.

EQ 03

Presence: Boost 2–4 kHz by 1–2 dB for vocal intelligibility on phone speakers.

EQ 04

High-end: Gentle 8 kHz shelf boost (+1 dB) for air without harshness.

Compression & Limiting for Deezer

01

Master bus: Gentle 2–3 dB of glue compression (ratio 2:1, slow attack 30ms, fast release).

02

Limiting: Brick-wall at -1 dBTP. Push integrated LUFS to target. Hip-hop can tolerate moderate limiting.

03

Use True Peak limiting, not just sample peak. Inter-sample peaks cause distortion on streaming.

Hip-Hop LUFS Targets. All Platforms Compared

How Hip-Hop mastering specs differ across every major streaming platform.

PlatformIntegrated LUFSTrue PeakCurrent page
-14 LUFS-1 dBTPView guide →
-16 LUFS-1 dBTPView guide →
▶️YouTube
-14 LUFS-1 dBTPView guide →
🌊Tidal
-14 LUFS-1 dBTPView guide →
-11 LUFS-0.5 dBTPView guide →
🎵TikTok
-14 LUFS-1 dBTPView guide →
-13 LUFS-0.5 dBTPView guide →
🎛️Beatport
-9 LUFS-0.3 dBTPView guide →
-14 LUFS-1 dBTPView guide →
-14 LUFS-1 dBTPView guide →
-14 LUFS-1 dBTPView guide →
🎶Deezer
-15 LUFS-1 dBTPYou are here

Technical Methodology. Hip-Hop Mastering for Deezer

Target: -15 LUFS integrated · -1 dBTP true peak · EBU R128 / ITU-R BS.1770-4 compliant

1Loudness MeasurementITU-R BS.1770-4

We measure integrated LUFS using K-weighted filtering per ITU-R BS.1770-4: a high-shelf pre-filter at 1681.97 Hz (+3.9998 dB gain) followed by a 75 Hz high-pass (Q=0.5) to remove DC offset and low-frequency rumble. The mean square of the filtered signal gives us integrated loudness in LUFS.

2True Peak DetectionEBU R128 / dBTP

True peak (dBTP) is measured at 4× oversampling to detect inter-sample peaks that occur between digital samples. Sample-peak measurement alone misses these peaks, which cause audible clipping during AAC and MP3 lossy encoding on streaming platforms. We enforce the true peak ceiling at -1 dBTP for all standard platforms.

3Genre-Specific EQParametric & Multi-Band EQ

Genre EQ profiles apply frequency-specific gain based on each genre's sonic characteristics: mud reduction at 250–400 Hz for hip-hop and trap, presence enhancement at 2–4 kHz for vocal clarity on phone speakers, sub-bass high-pass at 30–35 Hz for all genres to remove inaudible subsonic content that wastes headroom.

4Dynamic Range CompressionVCA Bus Compression / Parallel Compression

Master bus compression uses a VCA-style algorithm with genre-tuned attack and release times. Lo-fi and jazz use 50 ms attack to preserve transients; EDM and techno use 5–10 ms for density. Parallel compression blends the compressed signal at 20–40% wet to lift room sound without eliminating the uncompressed transient attack.

5Brick-Wall LimitingTrue Peak Limiter / Intersample Peak Control

The final limiter stage uses lookahead limiting (3–5 ms) to catch transient peaks before they exceed the true peak ceiling. The limiter targets platform-specific LUFS: -14 LUFS for Spotify, -16 LUFS for Apple Music, -11 LUFS for SoundCloud, -9 LUFS for Beatport. Gain reduction is transparent at 1–2 dB of limiting; beyond 3 dB audible artifacts require reducing the input drive.

All processing runs in your browser via Web Audio API. No audio data is uploaded to any server.

Hip-Hop Mastering FAQ. Deezer

What LUFS should hip-hop be mastered to for Deezer?

Master hip-hop to -15 LUFS integrated for Deezer, with a true peak of -1 dBTP. Deezer normalizes to -15 LUFS and also offers Deezer HiFi (FLAC lossless). Target -15 LUFS integrated for consistency across standard and HiFi listeners. Deezer's audience includes quality-focused European listeners. Clean masters with good dynamic range perform well.

How do I get the 808 to punch through on Deezer?

Keep 60–80 Hz full for 808 body, cut 250–350 Hz to reduce muddiness, and sidechain compress the kick and 808 together. On Deezer, the full-range playback will reproduce sub-bass if your master is clean.

Should I master hip-hop loud or dynamic?

For Deezer, target -15 LUFS. Going louder gets turned down automatically and only removes dynamics. Aim for 7–10 LU dynamic range for a punchy, competitive master.

Hip-Hop Mastering for Other Platforms

Other Genres on Deezer

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