Isolate the bass line
Focus on note choices, slides, ghost notes, and transitions without the rest of the arrangement masking the part.
Start with the musical part you need to hear, remove, or export. Then choose the separation depth that gives enough control without adding extra tracks to manage.
Focus on note choices, slides, ghost notes, and transitions without the rest of the arrangement masking the part.
Use the remaining stems as a play-along track when you want to perform the bass part yourself.
Compare bass and drums separately to hear how kick patterns, accents, and syncopation work together.
Choose the song, rehearsal recording, or media file you want to break into parts.
Use 2 tracks for a quick split, or choose 4 or 6 tracks when the arrangement needs deeper control.
Listen for bleed or artifacts and decide which outputs are useful for the next task.
Use the web tool, Google Play app, or App Store app depending on where the session is happening.
These pages are audience-specific because each musician listens for different details and needs different outputs from the same source recording.
Use the bass output to study parts that are difficult to hear in a dense mix.
Practice against drums and accompaniment to test timing, feel, and note length.
Hear how the bass supports vocal phrasing, chord movement, and drum accents.
Prepare isolated bass references or bass-muted play-alongs for students and ensemble rehearsals.
A mixed song does not contain perfect original multitracks. NeuralSound estimates the parts from the finished file, so dense arrangements, effects, and overlapping frequencies can leave bleed or artifacts.
Preview each result before turning it into a lesson, rehearsal track, backing part, remix source, or performance reference.
Related workflows: isolate instruments, audio separation, musician app.
Yes. Choose a stem layout that includes bass, preview the output, and download it if it is useful for practice or study.
Yes. Export the other stems or use the bass output as a reference while practicing the part yourself.
No. Kick drum, synth bass, distorted guitars, and mastering compression can overlap with the bass part.
Use 4-track for vocals, drums, bass, and other. Use 6-track if guitar and piano also need their own references.