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Reviews for "LoFi beat"

I like this, anyway. Wasn't really looking for the exact thing, I don't really like the repeats a lot. Well done!

is this free to use as background music for a youtube video? I can add in credits(as in say the creator, the song name and put link in the description)

ableton is not good for lofi beats unless you have a custom batch of lofi instruments and lofi piano fl studio is good to

kinda don't like the melody but the beat and timing are perfect, could change some pace or try experimenting with some stuff

Try:
-making stuff more atmospheric
-adding more effects [ personally like using large hall ]
-don't make things repetitive
-always concentrate on one thing first then move on because it seemed to me that u were going for like lofi plus dubstep

that's all for now, Good luck with ur future project

this isn't necessarily lofi? but it's still good. :)

Cethic responds:

Low fidelity or lo fi (adjectival form "low-fidelity" or "lo-fi") is a type of sound recording which contains technical flaws that make the recording sound different compared with the live sound being recorded, such as distortion, hum, background noise, or limited frequency response. The term "low-fidelity" is used in contrast to the audiophile term high fidelity or "hi-fi", which refers to equipment that very accurately reproduces music without harmonic distortion or unwanted frequency emphasis or resonance. The ideas of lo-fi are taken to extremes by the genre or "scene" of no fidelity, or "no-fi". Some lower-budget recordings from the 1970s and 1980s have an unintended "lo-fi" sound because of the limitations of the analog recording and processing techniques of the time, which introduced unwanted artifacts such as distortion, hum and phase problems. In some recordings, however, high fidelity recording is purposely avoided, or the artifacts such as simulated vinyl record crackles are deliberately retained or added in for aesthetic or historical reasons.