You can have great ideas, strong melodies, and solid production, but if your mix sounds “cheap,” the track won’t hit the same.
When people say a mix sounds expensive, they’re usually reacting to a few key things:
It’s not about expensive plugins. It’s about decisions.
Here’s how to actually make your mix sound expensive.
Cheap mixes are usually crowded, not weak.
Before adding plugins, remove what’s unnecessary:
Use tools like EQ inside Ableton Live to create space before you try to add energy.
Clarity always comes from subtraction first.
A professional mix starts with levels, not plugins.
Ask yourself:
If your levels are right, your mix already feels 70% “expensive.”
Plugins can’t fix bad balance.
Low-end is where most mixes fall apart.
To make it sound clean and professional:
A messy low-end instantly makes a mix feel amateur.
A clean low-end makes everything else feel polished.
Expensive mixes don’t just sound wide, they sound deep.
Instead of putting reverb on everything, think in layers:
Use send/return tracks in Ableton Live to control this space.
The goal is to place elements in a 3D environment, not drown them in effects.
Digital mixes can feel too clean or thin.
Small amounts of saturation add:
Use it gently on:
You shouldn’t clearly hear it but you should feel it.
Wide mixes feel premium but only when done right.
Use width on:
Keep important elements like:
closer to the center.
Too much width can actually make your mix feel weak, especially in mono.
Static mixes feel lifeless.
Expensive mixes evolve.
Automate things like:
Even small changes over time make your track feel dynamic and intentional.
One of the fastest ways to improve is to compare your mix with professional songs.
Import a reference track into Ableton Live and compare:
This keeps your ears grounded.
A common mistake is adding too many plugins.
Expensive mixes are usually:
Every plugin should have a purpose.
If you don’t know why it’s there, remove it.
An expensive mix doesn’t come from expensive tools.
It comes from:
When everything sits where it should, the mix feels effortless and that’s what people hear as “professional.”
Focus on clarity first, and your mixes will naturally start sounding bigger, cleaner, and more expensive.
At Lost Stories Academy, students learn music production in Ableton Live through structured offline programs combined with real-world practice, mentorship, and collaboration. The focus is on building skills that translate beyond tutorials and into finished music.
If you want clarity, feedback, and a creative environment that pushes you forward, structured learning can make a real difference.