Learning a solo from a record where the guitar buries everything else — or trying to play lead over a track that already has one? Split the song into stems, pull the guitar fader down, and the band keeps playing without it.
Most free splitters give you four stems and dump the guitar into 'other'. Here the guitar gets its own channel — mute it, solo it, or just turn it down.
Flip it the other way: solo the guitar to hear the voicings and picking clearly, slow the song to 75% without changing pitch, and loop the passage.
Happy with the mix? Bounce a guitar-free backing track to a clean 24-bit WAV and take it to rehearsal.
Any MP3, WAV, FLAC or M4A up to 10 minutes.
Six faders appear — vocals, drums, bass, guitar, piano, other. Pull the guitar down or hit M.
Loop sections, slow it down, add a count-in — then export the mix if you want to keep it.
Both end up in the guitar stem. Heavily strummed acoustic parts can partially land in the 'other' stem — that channel has its own fader too, so you can still shape it.
Honestly: almost. Instruments overlap in the frequency spectrum, so every separation tool on the market leaves a little bleed. It gets quiet enough to play over comfortably — that's the realistic promise.
Yes — that's the core use. Mute the guitar, keep the band, export a 24-bit WAV backing track, no watermarks.
Nothing while we're in beta. No account either. There's a daily cap on separations because the AI runs on paid GPUs.
Drop in a song and have your stems in a few minutes.
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