Logic Pro Lo-Fi Hip-Hop Tutorial: Stock Plugins Only

If you’re a Logic Pro user, you probably rely on your favourite third-party plugins for saturation, reverb, tape wobble and all the usual Lo-Fi magic.
But what happens if you take them all away?

In this video, I challenged myself to create a full Lo-Fi Hip-Hop track and DAW template using nothing but Logic Pro’s stock plugins and built-in sounds.
No FabFilter, SoundToys, analogue-modelled tape plugins. Just Logic.

And as it turns out… Logic’s stock tools are far better than many producers realise.

Why I Created This Stock-Only Lo-Fi Template

I recently teamed up with Production Music Tools to design a Logic Pro Lo-Fi Hip-Hop DAW Template that would be:

  • beginner-friendly
  • affordable
  • based entirely on Logic’s native tools
  • easy to learn from and adapt

To make it fully accessible, I could only use Stock Logic plugins.
Therefore I was forced to approach sound-design, mixing and Lo-Fi character in a much more intentional way—and subsequently it produced some amazing results.

If you’d like to skip ahead and try the finished template for yourself, it’s available below (and currently 50% off during Black Friday):

👉 Download the Lo-Fi Logic Pro Template (50% Off)


🎹 Building the Lo-Fi Sound: Stock Logic Plugins Come Alive

Even without third-party plugins, Logic offers everything you need to get authentic Lo-Fi character:

1. Electric Piano Foundation

The track is built around Logic’s stock electric piano.
On its own it sounds clean—almost too clean— therefore I used:

  • Fat FX (Lo-Fi Resonant preset)
  • Vintage Opto Compressor
  • Sidechain compression triggered by the kick
  • Subtle EQ cuts to tame low end

This combination gives the keys that warm, wobbly, vintage texture we all associate with Lo-Fi.


2. Synth Stabs & Melodies with Alchemy

Alchemy is massively underrated.
For this track, I tweaked several stock patches—changing envelopes, oscillators, and filtering—to create:

  • shimmering synth shots
  • airy melodic bells
  • gentle pad textures

Tape Delay + Space Designer (with long, lush IRs like Black Hole) helped push these sounds into dreamy Lo-Fi territory.

A hidden gem worth mentioning: Match EQ.
By sidechaining it to an earlier reference, I was able to automatically match a tonal curve from another synth—which finally got me closer to the exact vibe I wanted.


3. Strings, Pads & Textures

Logic’s Studio Strings can sound too clean for Lo-Fi, but with:

  • Auto Filter LFO wobble
  • Lo-Fi saturation via Fat FX
  • Heavy high-cut EQ

…you can turn pristine strings into something closer to Mellotron tape strings.


4. Guitars from Tangerine Sounds

For extra atmosphere, I chopped a guitar loop from my own sample pack Vintage Vibe (available at TangerineSounds.com).
A simple slice, placed sparingly, went a long way.


5. Basslines Using Logic’s Session Bass Player

Logic’s Session Player generated a great starting bassline based on the chord track.
I converted it to MIDI and customised it for a smooth, rounded Lo-Fi vibe.


6. Drums: Stock Kits + Lo-Fi Layering

The core drums come from:

  • Drum Machine Designer (Dark Arts patch)
  • Layered with samples from Lo-Fi Tape Drums Vol.1
  • Shaker, tambourine & percussion layers
  • Drum bus: EQ → Compressor → Limiter → Auto Filter

I also used reverse kicks and snares to mimic a DJ scratch-style transition, plus a top loop from Cat Toy Drums.


7. Effects, Transitions & Atmosphere

To glue the whole mix together, I added:

  • Reverse crashes (shaped with Match EQ)
  • Bar chimes (panned manually)
  • Noise sweeps
  • Foley ambience (birds, garden atmos)
  • Long evolving Space Designer reverbs
  • Final vinyl crackle layer (because… Lo-Fi!)

8. Vocals & Ad-libs (All Stock Processing)

I even included some original vocal one-shots—EQ’d, compressed, pitched up and side-chained to the kick for rhythmic pumping.
ChromaVerb and AutoFilter added that dreamy Lo-Fi haze.

These vocal samples are partly from my Lo-Fi Essentials pack and partly made exclusively for this track.


🔥 What You’ll Learn Inside the DAW Template

The template shows exactly how to:

  • create Lo-Fi keys using Fat FX, Tape Delay and sidechain
  • make synths sound vintage using Space Designer warped IRs
  • layer melodies for a lush Lo-Fi atmosphere
  • program drums using Logic’s Drum Machine Designer
  • treat vocals & ad-libs with stock plugins
  • add wobble, pump and movement without third-party tools
  • structure a complete Lo-Fi track ready for mixing

It’s ideal for:

  • beginner producers
  • Logic users who feel stuck using the same few plugins
  • anyone wanting to understand Lo-Fi sound design
  • YouTube beatmakers & lo-fi playlist creators
  • producers who want a ready-made workflow they can customise

🎁 Download the Lo-Fi Logic Pro Template (50% Off for Black Friday)

If you want to dig inside the session, explore every plugin, and adapt the arrangement for your own music, grab the full template below:

👉 Get the Lo-Fi Logic Pro DAW Template (50% Off)

This includes:

  • the full Logic Pro project
  • stems and samples
  • channel strips
  • mixing tools
  • arrangement structure
  • vocal ad-lib samples
  • everything you see in the video

Final Thoughts

Working with only stock Logic plugins was a refreshing challenge.
It forced me to think more creatively about sound design and reminded me that expensive plugins aren’t always necessary—especially for genres like Lo-Fi Hip-Hop. Ultimately I was able to achieve similar results to mixes that have used premium, third party plugins.

If you want to explore these techniques hands-on, definitely check out the template.
And if you have favourite Logic stock plugins of your own, I’d love to hear about them in the comments.

Happy producing — and enjoy the video!

👉 More from the Home Recording Studio Blog