Need help achieving this sound..

Filtering out the highs and lows and leaving only a middle area of frequency sounds like it would do the job. So maybe just an EQ on the master ? Side-note izotope has a free vinyl simulator that has an option to toggle year it emulates and it can do a great job of getting rid of a lot of freq but also adding some grit to it. Hope this helps some , maybe someone else can give a better answer.
 
sounds an awful lot like what you got off an old record player when you bypassed the RIAA eq part of the preamp - good mid response terrible highs and almost non-existent lows.

Consider these articles/threads

Audacity Forum • View topic - When is Inverse RIAA appropriate?
Audacity Forum • View topic - Vinyl to CD - RIAA equalization
Audacity Forum • View topic - Equalization Presets?
Audacity Forum • View topic - Reverse RIAA Equalization curve
RIAA and other EQ curves in phono amplification
Software Based RIAA Equalization For Audiophile Quality Vinyl Archival? - Gearslutz.com

whilst focused on vinyl conversion technologies, the RIAA curve is at the heart of the process. Applying the RIAA curve to this purpose is a simply a step to left and step forward past most of the conversion guff......

this article contains the meat and potatoes of setting up an RIAA curve - change the sign (negative to positive and vice versa) of the reduction/emphasis to apply it as a inverse curve.
 
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Go check out filter and flagner plugins, scroll through the preset - I can think of one called "Retro Sound" On Fruity Filter
 
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