I have playlists I like. Music I've saved, albums I come back to. And then I have the lo-fi study streams, which are a completely different thing you switch to when you want that feeling.
I got tired of choosing between them.
Lo-fi as a genre is kind of a mood delivery system. It's not really about the songs. It's the warmth, the slow wobble, the sense that the audio is coming through something old. People put it on when they want to feel settled, focused, a little distant from whatever is loud and bright.
What I wanted was that feeling on top of whatever I was already listening to. Not a different playlist. Just a filter on the thing I already had open.
There wasn't a good way to do this on a Mac. Every tool I found worked the same way: you install a driver, it creates a fake audio device, you route everything through that, and suddenly your system audio is this thing you set up and have to manage. That felt like too much for what I wanted. I just wanted Spotify to sound warmer.
So I made Lo-fi Anything. You open it, pick an app, and it plays that app's audio back through a chain of effects: tape saturation, a slow pitch-drag, reverb, some vinyl crackle if you want it. There are six presets with different characters. True Lo-fi is the classic study-stream sound. Old Radio is the most beaten-up. Dream is the dreamy one.
The part I keep coming back to is that it's not a separate thing. It's not a lo-fi playlist I switched to. It's my music, just slower and warmer. A song I like sounds different through Cassette than it does through Study, which sounds different than it does dry. It becomes more interesting to listen to.
I use it mostly in the morning, with whatever I already have on. I put on something I know well, flip it through Old Radio, and it sounds like I'm hearing it from another room.
It's a Mac app. $5 one time, with a 3-day free trial and no account to set up. There's a before/after audio clip on the site since a screenshot can't really show what it does.
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