Mastering Guide

Mastering Metal for YouTube Music

Metal 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 wall-of-sound density, kick + snare punching through dense guitars, aggressive but defined while delivering against the platform spec. Here's how it works.

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Why Metal masters differently for YouTube Music

Metal has a specific spectral signature: scooped mids around 400-800 Hz, cymbal sizzle 8-12 kHz, sub-100 Hz definition without mud. 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: Gojira, Lamb of God, Meshuggah, Sleep Token. Listening to commercial masters in the genre on YouTube Music gives a calibration target for where your master should sit.

The platform spec

Loudness target
-14 LUFS integrated
True-peak ceiling
-1.0 dBTP
Delivery format
Opus/AAC streaming, you upload via YouTube content distribution
Metal natural range
-7 to -9 LUFS

How LuvLang's 24-stage chain tunes for Metal

The chain runs the same 24 named stages on every track, but the parameters tune to genre. For Metal, the emphasized moves are: Multiband compression on the low-mid mud + transient shaping for kick punch + careful brickwall limiting. 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 wall-of-sound density, kick + snare punching through dense guitars, aggressive but defined signature listeners associate with the genre.

Common Metal mastering pitfalls (and what we do about them)

What you upload, what comes back

Drag any WAV / MP3 / FLAC into the chain. The system runs the full 24 stages, applies the Metal 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.

Pricing for this combo

Hearing is believing.

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Frequently asked

What LUFS should I master Metal for YouTube Music?

YouTube Music's recommended target is -14 LUFS integrated. Metal naturally sits well at -7 to -9 LUFS, so for YouTube Music delivery aim for the platform target while preserving wall-of-sound density, kick + snare punching through dense guitars, aggressive but defined.

Why does mastering Metal differ for YouTube Music?

YouTube applies content-aware loudness normalization similar to Spotify. Video-first audience may use phone speakers — translation matters. Metal has unique characteristics — scooped mids around 400-800 Hz, cymbal sizzle 8-12 kHz, sub-100 Hz definition without mud — so the chain is tuned for that combination, not a generic preset.

What true-peak ceiling should I use?

-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.

What should I avoid mastering Metal?

Three common mistakes: over-limited losing all attack; muddy low-end killing kick definition; harsh sibilance from too much top. LuvLang's chain detects each of these and applies corrective processing — Multiband compression on the low-mid mud + transient shaping for kick punch + careful brickwall limiting are the targeted moves.

Can I hear it before I pay?

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.