Waveform

Lo-Fi typical envelope

EQ Profile

Warmth (80–200 Hz) & Low-Pass Rolloff (above 12 kHz)

-13 LUFS

LUFS Target

Audiomack integrated

Spectrum

Pink-noise reference

Lo-Fi Mastering for Audiomack

Intentional warmth, vinyl crackle, -16 to -18 LUFS · Tuned for Audiomack playback

Target: -13 LUFS · True Peak: -0.5 dBTP · Dynamic Range: 12-16 LU

Lo-Fi Mastering Specification. Audiomack

ParameterLo-Fi Specification
Loudness Target-13 LUFS integrated (Audiomack optimized)
True Peak Ceiling-0.5 dBTP. Inter-sample peak limit
Dynamic Range12-16 LU LU. Genre-appropriate
EQ FocusWarmth (80–200 Hz) & Low-Pass Rolloff (above 12 kHz)
Stereo ImageCentered and intimate, subtle mono tendencies
Platform AlgorithmAudiomack normalizes to approximately -13 LUFS and is the leading streaming platform for hip-hop, Afrobeats, and Afropop in Africa and the diaspora.

Why Lo-Fi on Audiomack Needs Specialized Mastering

Lo-fi mastering requires a counter-intuitive approach: the goal is authentic imperfection, meaning the mastering chain must enhance artifacts rather than remove them. Vinyl crackle at -40 to -50 dBFS sits in the noise floor and should not be eliminated by noise reduction processes. The low-pass filter characteristic that defines lo-fi (cutting highs above 12–15 kHz) should be applied before the master limiter to prevent the limiter from pumping against the filtered noise. The genre's quiet target of -16 to -18 LUFS integrated is a feature, not a flaw. Lo-fi listeners frequently pair it with ambient playlists where loudness consistency matters more than maximum impact. Tape saturation on the master bus adds second-harmonic distortion at 2× the fundamental frequency: for a 200 Hz bass note, saturation adds warmth at 400 Hz, thickening low-mids without adding sub-bass. Bitcrusher effects create aliasing distortion that interacts with streaming encoders. Set bit depth no lower than 14-bit to avoid unintended encoding artifacts. High-pass at 30 Hz removes rumble; keep the rest of the sub-bass intact for headphone listeners even if the lo-fi aesthetic leans warm.

Audiomack context: Audiomack normalizes to approximately -13 LUFS and is the leading streaming platform for hip-hop, Afrobeats, and Afropop in Africa and the diaspora. Tracks stream on a wide range of devices including budget Android phones. Prioritize sub-bass clarity and mid-range punch that translates on smaller speakers.

Lo-Fi × Audiomack. The Normalization Math

How -13 LUFS interacts with Lo-Fi's natural loudness window

Lo-Fi masters naturally land at -18 to -14 LUFS. Roughly 3.0 dB quieter than Audiomack's -13 LUFS target. Audiomack will boost the master at playback, which means sample peaks that read clean against your DAW meters can approach 0 dBFS once the algorithm adds gain. True-peak limiting at -0.5 dBTP becomes a hard requirement, not a stylistic choice. Inter-sample peaks that survive a -0.5 dBTP ceiling at -16 LUFS will clip after Audiomack normalizes your track upward. The -0.5 dBTP ceiling specified for Audiomack prevents inter-sample peaks from clipping during the codec's reconstruction filter, which is especially relevant for Lo-Fi's 200-800 Hz vintage mids content where high-amplitude transients accumulate against the limiter.

Codec Reality for Lo-Fi on Audiomack

Audiomack streams AAC at 192 kbps, with the codec's artifact tendency clustered at 60-100 Hz sub-bass on budget Android playback. For Lo-Fi, the vulnerable 200-500 Hz tape-saturated mids overlaps with the codec's weak zone, so masters that sound clean on monitoring loudspeakers can develop swirly, modulated artifacts on Audiomack playback. Bake a -1 to -2 dB shelf cut around the artifact band into the master, or accept that Audiomack's mid-tier playback will compress the genre's character. The dynamic-range character of Lo-Fi (wide and intentionally dynamic, 12-16 LU) interacts with this codec tier specifically: compress conservatively, then let the codec do the rest. Over-compression at the mastering stage stacks with the codec's loudness handling and produces a flat, fatigued listening result.

Lo-Fi EQ Profile for Audiomack

EQ 01

Lo-fi character: Apply gentle vinyl crackle or tape saturation BEFORE the master limiter.

EQ 02

Warmth: Boost 80–200 Hz for vintage warmth. Roll off aggressively above 12 kHz for the 'old record' effect.

EQ 03

Low-end: Tight high-pass at 50 Hz. Lo-fi doesn't need sub-bass. Keep it simple.

EQ 04

No brightness: Do NOT boost high frequencies. Lo-fi intentionally lacks 'air'. Brightness destroys the aesthetic.

Compression & Limiting for Audiomack

01

Soft limiting: Lo-fi should breathe at -16 to -18 LUFS. Do NOT push hard. The quietness IS the aesthetic.

02

Tape saturation: Apply subtle harmonic saturation to glue the mix. This is character, not correction.

03

Vinyl simulation: Add subtle wow/flutter effect if your mastering chain supports it.

Lo-Fi LUFS Targets. All Platforms Compared

How Lo-Fi 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 →
🎧Audiomack
-13 LUFS-0.5 dBTPYou are here
🎛️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 dBTPView guide →

Technical Methodology. Lo-Fi Mastering for Audiomack

Target: -13 LUFS integrated · -0.5 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.

Lo-Fi Mastering FAQ. Audiomack

What LUFS for lo-fi on Audiomack?

-13 LUFS is the target, but lo-fi typically masters at -16 to -18 LUFS intentionally. Audiomack will not boost it. The quietness is part of the aesthetic and listeners expect it.

Should I remove the vinyl crackle before mastering?

No. Vinyl crackle and tape hiss are intentional lo-fi elements. Apply them before mastering so they're baked into the final file. The master limiter then treats them as part of the signal, preserving the authentic texture.

How do I keep lo-fi warm without making it muddy?

Boost 100–200 Hz for warmth, but apply a tight high-pass at 50 Hz to remove rumble. Cut 300–400 Hz by 2–3 dB to reduce muddiness if needed. The warmth should come from midrange saturation, not low-frequency buildup.

Lo-Fi Mastering for Other Platforms

Other Genres on Audiomack

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