A while back Joshua Casper a fellow Ableton Ninja, Posted 15 free EQ eight presets replicating the the popular iZotope Ozone EQ.
That is not what Ozone 8 is made for. Technically you should never it at mixing. You need to finish your mix the way you want it to sound and print it as a stereo mix. Ozone 8 is a mastering tool. Once you created yoir stereo mix, import it in a new project and use Ozone 8 to maximize the level and compression and possibly micro adjust. IZotope Ozone is a complete mastering system in a single integrated plug-in includes eight essential mastering tools like maximizer, equalizer, multiband dynamics, multiband stereo imaging, post. If you're unable to find your iZotope products within Ableton Live, you can try the steps below to locate them: 1. Rescan your folder. To perform a rescan, open Ableton Preferences and head to Plug-ins (10.1 and later) or File/Folder (All versions until 10.1) and click the rescan button under 'Plug-In Sources'.
Ozone Imager Ableton
You can get them here for free along side a very nice EQ tutorial.
In Joshua's post he is using Live 8.
To take advantage of the completely new EQ in Live 9. I've ported his presets to work with the new Live 9 EQ in High-Quality Oversampling Mode.
Most of these presets offer subtle but important EQ curves for your music with self explanatory preset names.
Ozone Presets List
– Add Digital Presence
– Add Richness & Depth Mid-Side
– Brighter & Bassier
– Dramatic Width & Open Mid-Side
– Drum & Bass Boost
– Electro Boost
– Life Lead Vocal Mid-Side
– Pop Sheen
– Reduce Mid Range Fog
– Reveal Female Lead Vocal
– Rock Brightness
– Subtle Stereo Width Mid-Side
– Tighten Bass Mid-Side
O-zone Ableton
– Touch of Analog Warmth
Ozone Vs Ableton
– Touch of Digital Warmth