One of the most common pieces of advice floating around modern music production is:

“You should master specifically for Spotify.”

Usually, this means aiming for a certain LUFS target — often around -14 LUFS — because streaming platforms normalize playback volume.

The problem is:
this advice is often misunderstood, oversimplified, and taken far too literally.

At Moreish Studios, we generally recommend focusing on creating the best possible master overall, rather than compromising your music to chase streaming normalization targets.

Because in most cases, a strong professional master still wins.

Should I Master For Streaming
 

What Streaming Normalization Actually Does

Platforms like Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube, and TIDAL use loudness normalization to create a more consistent listening experience between tracks.

In simple terms:

  • louder tracks get turned down
  • quieter tracks may get turned up slightly
  • playback becomes more level overall

This is where LUFS (Loudness Units Full Scale) comes into the conversation.

Streaming platforms analyze the loudness of your track and adjust playback volume accordingly. For example, Spotify explains its loudness normalization process and why playback volume may be adjusted across different tracks.

But here’s the important part:

they usually turn music down — not up.

That changes everything.

 

Why Chasing LUFS Targets Can Hurt Your Music

A lot of online advice suggests mastering quieter specifically to avoid streaming normalization.

But this often creates weaker masters.

When people aggressively target low LUFS values like:

  • -14 LUFS
  • -16 LUFS

they sometimes end up sacrificing:

  • energy
  • density
  • emotional impact
  • low-end weight
  • perceived excitement

The result can sound:

  • smaller
  • flatter
  • less engaging

especially outside streaming platforms.

And importantly:
Spotify does not reward your song for being mastered quietly.

It simply adjusts playback volume.

 

A Great Master Still Sounds Great When Turned Down

This is one of the biggest misconceptions in modern mastering.

If a professionally mastered track sounds powerful at around:

  • -9 LUFS
  • -8 LUFS

Spotify simply lowers the playback level.

But:

  • the harmonic balance remains
  • the punch remains
  • the depth remains
  • the tonal decisions remain

A great master does not suddenly become worse because normalization reduced the playback volume.

In fact, many commercially successful records still master significantly louder than streaming targets — because the overall sound and impact matter more than the number itself.

 

Loudness Is Not the Same as Impact

This is where professional mastering becomes important.

True impact comes from:

  • dynamics
  • transient control
  • tonal balance
  • harmonic richness
  • stereo depth
  • arrangement clarity

Not simply loudness.

Two songs can measure the same LUFS value and feel completely different emotionally.

This is why experienced mastering engineers focus on:

  • translation
  • emotional energy
  • consistency across playback systems

rather than chasing internet numbers.

 

Why Internet Advice Around Streaming Mastering Became Misleading

The rise of online music education has helped many artists learn production techniques — which is a great thing.

But it has also created a huge amount of oversimplified mastering advice.

There’s now an entire generation of tutorials claiming:

  • “Spotify wants -14 LUFS”
  • “louder masters are bad”
  • “you should leave tons of headroom”
  • “streaming services punish loud music”

In reality, streaming platforms simply normalize playback volume.

They do not judge your artistic decisions.

And they certainly do not replace professional mastering judgment.

This is why so many modern “streaming optimized” masters sound:

  • underpowered
  • lifeless
  • overly conservative

especially when played outside Spotify.

 

One Excellent Master Is Usually Better Than Multiple Compromised Versions

In most cases, we recommend creating:
one excellent full-quality master

rather than:

  • separate Spotify masters
  • separate Apple Music masters
  • separate YouTube masters

because a properly balanced professional master generally translates well everywhere.

That’s how most commercial releases are still handled.

The focus should be:

  • making the record sound incredible
  • preserving emotional impact
  • ensuring reliable playback translation

Not chasing slightly different loudness targets for every platform.

 

Monitoring and Conversion Matter More Than LUFS Numbers

One thing often ignored in online mastering discussions is the importance of:

  • monitoring accuracy
  • room acoustics
  • AD/DA conversion

These factors dramatically affect mastering decisions.

A poor listening environment can easily lead engineers to:

  • over-limit
  • under-compress
  • thin out low-end
  • lose depth and punch

At Moreish Studios, our mastering workflow is built around:

  • high-end conversion
  • accurate monitoring
  • AES-standard listening conditions
  • analogue and digital hybrid processing

This allows faster, more reliable mastering decisions based on what the music actually needs — not arbitrary numbers.

For a broader look at loudness, normalization, and why meter readings should not replace musical judgment, Sound On Sound’s article on loudness and mastering is a useful reference.

 

The Moreish Studios Mastering Philosophy

At Moreish Studios, we approach mastering with a simple philosophy:

make the music sound as good as possible first.

That means focusing on:

  • depth
  • clarity
  • impact
  • translation
  • emotional connection

rather than obsessing over normalization targets.

Plugins, LUFS meters, and streaming specs are all tools.

But they are not the music.

The listener ultimately responds to:

  • feeling
  • tone
  • energy
  • emotion

And that’s what great mastering protects.

 

Final Thought

Streaming normalization changed playback volume.

It did not change what makes music sound good.

A powerful, well-balanced professional master will still sound powerful when normalized.

So instead of asking:

“What LUFS should I master for Spotify?”

The better question is:

“What makes this record sound its best?”

That answer is almost always more important than the number on the meter.


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