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If you’ve been mixing music for a while, you’ve probably heard about Spotify’s big update: lossless streaming is finally here. That means Premium users can now listen to songs in full-quality FLAC, files that preserve every detail of the original mix. No more heavy compression or missing frequencies that get squashed in MP3s.
So, what does this mean for you as a music producer or a mixer just starting?
In the old days, most people heard your mix through highly compressed audio. MP3s and low-quality streams smoothed out small details — often hiding mixing mistakes. Now, lossless audio brings back all those tiny nuances. Every reverb tail, panning choice, and EQ adjustment is suddenly audible.
That’s great news if your mix is clean. But it also means flat, over-compressed songs will sound harsh or “fatiguing.” Listeners can now tell when a song’s been pushed too far in the volume race.
Two key terms you’ll hear a lot now are headroom and dynamic range.
With lossless audio, preserving those shifts in loudness creates a richer, more natural experience. So instead of squashing your limiter for maximum loudness, aim for dynamics that make your song move.
Modern mixing tools can make this easier. For example, plugins that use transparent compressors, transient shapers, or multiband limiters help you keep transient clarity and the precise snap of a drum hit or the breath before a vocal line.
Since lossless formats like 24-bit/44.1 kHz FLAC can reproduce these details faithfully, paying attention to your transients now matters more than ever. Your listeners will hear every bit of your precision.
The “Loudness Wars” are fading as platforms normalize volume and reward clean, dynamic mixes. This shift to higher fidelity means mixing with care is finally the winning strategy. Focus less on being loud and more on being clear!