Classical / Orchestral translates differently to YouTube Music than other genres. -14 LUFS integrated is the right loudness target; -1.0 dBTP is the right peak ceiling. The chain has to honor extreme dynamic range preservation (LRA 14-20), pp to ff intact, orchestral hall sound respected while delivering against the platform spec. Here's how it works.
Hear it on your own track first.
Full A/B preview before you pay. From $14.99. No subscription.
Master a trackClassical / Orchestral has a specific spectral signature: natural concert hall response, full spectrum 20 Hz - 20 kHz, no genre-style processing. YouTube Music's delivery context — Mixed audience from earbuds to TV speakers; mid-range translation is critical — means the master has to translate from studio monitors to the listener's actual gear. YouTube applies content-aware loudness normalization similar to Spotify. Video-first audience may use phone speakers — translation matters.
Reference artists in this space: Hilary Hahn, Yo-Yo Ma, Berlin Philharmonic recordings, London Symphony. Listening to commercial masters in the genre on YouTube Music gives a calibration target for where your master should sit.
The chain runs the same 24 named stages on every track, but the parameters tune to genre. For Classical / Orchestral, the emphasized moves are: Minimal-to-zero compression + true peak ceiling only + classical-aware target (Spotify Classical = -16 LUFS, not -14). These are not on/off toggles — they're parameter adjustments inside stages that are always running.
The combination delivers a master that sits at -14 LUFS integrated on YouTube Music while preserving the extreme dynamic range preservation (LRA 14-20), pp to ff intact, orchestral hall sound respected signature listeners associate with the genre.
Drag any WAV / MP3 / FLAC into the chain. The system runs the full 24 stages, applies the Classical / Orchestral preset, targets -14 LUFS integrated for YouTube Music delivery, and produces a master in under 5 minutes. You hear the full A/B before you pay. YouTube Music-ready export available in your tier's format set.
Hearing is believing.
Master your track →YouTube Music's recommended target is -14 LUFS integrated. Classical / Orchestral naturally sits well at -18 to -23 LUFS, so for YouTube Music delivery aim for the platform target while preserving extreme dynamic range preservation (LRA 14-20), pp to ff intact, orchestral hall sound respected.
YouTube applies content-aware loudness normalization similar to Spotify. Video-first audience may use phone speakers — translation matters. Classical / Orchestral has unique characteristics — natural concert hall response, full spectrum 20 Hz - 20 kHz, no genre-style processing — so the chain is tuned for that combination, not a generic preset.
-1.0 dBTP is the recommended true-peak ceiling for YouTube Music. Going louder doesn't help — platform normalization plus codec headroom means -1 dBTP delivers full perceived loudness without inter-sample peak distortion on opus/aac streaming, you upload via youtube content distribution.
Three common mistakes: any limiting destroying performance dynamics; EQ-shaping breaking natural response; compressing to compete on streaming loudness. LuvLang's chain detects each of these and applies corrective processing — Minimal-to-zero compression + true peak ceiling only + classical-aware target (Spotify Classical = -16 LUFS, not -14) are the targeted moves.
Yes — every master plays through full A/B preview before checkout. Toggle Original ↔ Mastered in real time on the same playhead. Pay only if it sounds right. From $14.99.