Sims 4 mod adds 70 classic tracks to music station
s y d’s Get Famous mod added 70 Sims 2 and Sims 3 tracks to the Mix Master Music Station, turning studio sessions into a nostalgia trip with real gameplay payoff.

If your favorite Sims memories are tied to the songs you heard while a Sim hunkered down in a studio, s y d found a sharp way to bring that feeling back. Music Production Station - More Tracks added 70 classic tracks from The Sims 2 and The Sims 3 to The Sims 4’s Mix Master Music Station, and the result felt less like a cosmetic tweak than a time machine for music saves.
The appeal went well beyond simple track count. The mod required The Sims 4: Get Famous and built directly on the official Mix Master Music Station, the §1,500 object that lets Sims produce, remix, burn, and release tracks while building media production skill. That meant the mod did not replace the fame grind or invent a new system. It made an existing one feel fuller, more personal, and a lot less repetitive for players who spend long sessions pushing aspiring musicians through studio work, release cycles, and the climb toward celebrity.

What made the package stand out was the way it pulled from the franchise’s older soundtracks. Longtime players would recognize the emotional shorthand immediately: The Sims 2 and The Sims 3 music is part of the series’ identity, not just background noise. By folding those tracks into a career object in Get Famous, s y d turned the station into a small archive of Sims history. The mod also split the selections into genre-based production options, including alternative rock, blues, country, hip-hop, indie, metal, pop, and R&B, with some tracks locked behind level-based progression so the station still felt like it had a ramp rather than a cheat code.
That structure gave it real value in play. Retro-themed households, legacy saves, and creator stories about struggling artists all gained a better rhythm because the station now offered more variety in what Sims made and what players heard while they made it. The creator also listed optional add-on music stations and a Mix CD override that could switch between CD and vinyl covers, which made the whole setup even easier to build into a custom studio.
For players who already use Get Famous as a music career sandbox, this was the kind of callback mod that mattered. It did not just add 70 songs. It made the Mix Master Music Station feel like it had a memory, and that was the hook from the first track to the last.
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