Hip-Hop translates differently to Spotify than other genres. -14 LUFS integrated is the right loudness target; -1.0 dBTP is the right peak ceiling. The chain has to honor punchy 808 drums, vocal clarity, controlled chest voice 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 trackHip-Hop has a specific spectral signature: deep sub-bass, controlled 200-400 Hz, vocal presence at 2-4 kHz, controlled sibilance. Spotify's delivery context — Streaming-first audience; tracks judged on phone speakers and AirPods more than studio monitors — means the master has to translate from studio monitors to the listener's actual gear. Spotify normalizes to -14 LUFS — masters louder than this get turned down. No loudness penalty if you stay near target.
Reference artists in this space: Kendrick Lamar, Tyler the Creator, Frank Ocean (rap leans), Earl Sweatshirt. Listening to commercial masters in the genre on Spotify 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 Hip-Hop, the emphasized moves are: Multiband for 808 + spectral de-essing + parallel compression on vocals. 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 Spotify while preserving the punchy 808 drums, vocal clarity, controlled chest voice signature listeners associate with the genre.
Drag any WAV / MP3 / FLAC into the chain. The system runs the full 24 stages, applies the Hip-Hop preset, targets -14 LUFS integrated for Spotify delivery, and produces a master in under 5 minutes. You hear the full A/B before you pay. Spotify-ready export available in your tier's format set.
Hearing is believing.
Master your track →Spotify's recommended target is -14 LUFS integrated. Hip-Hop naturally sits well at -8 to -10 LUFS, so for Spotify delivery aim for the platform target while preserving punchy 808 drums, vocal clarity, controlled chest voice.
Spotify normalizes to -14 LUFS — masters louder than this get turned down. No loudness penalty if you stay near target. Hip-Hop has unique characteristics — deep sub-bass, controlled 200-400 Hz, vocal presence at 2-4 kHz, controlled sibilance — so the chain is tuned for that combination, not a generic preset.
-1.0 dBTP is the recommended true-peak ceiling for Spotify. Going louder doesn't help — platform normalization plus codec headroom means -1 dBTP delivers full perceived loudness without inter-sample peak distortion on ogg vorbis 320 kbps streaming, you upload wav/flac.
Three common mistakes: 808 distortion on phone speakers; muddy vocal-808 collision in 100-200 Hz; harsh sibilance from compressed vocal chains. LuvLang's chain detects each of these and applies corrective processing — Multiband for 808 + spectral de-essing + parallel compression on vocals 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.