How to Make Lo-Fi Beats: Complete Beginner Guide
Lo-fi hip-hop has become one of the most popular genres for bedroom producers and independent artists. Characterized by dusty samples, warm vinyl crackle, mellow melodies, and a relaxed aesthetic, lo-fi is accessible to beginners while offering enough depth to keep advanced producers engaged.
In this guide, we cover everything you need to start making lo-fi beats.
Essential Equipment
DAW
Any DAW works for lo-fi production. FL Studio is popular for its piano roll and pattern-based workflow; Ableton Live is loved for its session view and audio manipulation capabilities. LMMS is a free option that works well for lo-fi.
Samples
Splice and LANDR offer excellent sample packs. For lo-fi specifically, look for:
- Vinyl crackle and ambient noise loops
- Mellow piano and Rhodes chord progressions
- Drum breaks from vintage jazz and soul records
- Subtle tape warble and tape saturation effects
The Lo-Fi Sound
Lo-fi is defined by imperfection. Warm, slightly degraded audio with:
- Low-pass filters removing harsh high frequencies
- Vinyl crackle and ambient room noise
- Slight pitch drift on samples
- Compressor pumping and gentle limiting
- Reverb and delay for spaciousness
Step-by-Step
Find a sample, pitch it down 5-10%, add a low-pass filter around 10-12kHz, layer vinyl crackle underneath, program a simple drum pattern, add bass, and finish with gentle reverb and compression.
The simplicity is the point — do not overproduce. Lo-fi lives in the imperfections.