Isolate guitar parts
Focus on rhythm parts, lead lines, chord voicings, and transitions that can be hard to hear in a full mix.
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 rhythm parts, lead lines, chord voicings, and transitions that can be hard to hear in a full mix.
Use the rest of the arrangement as a practice bed while you perform the guitar part yourself.
Compare guitar with bass, drums, vocal, and piano outputs to understand how the part supports the song.
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.
Separate the guitar part to learn the arrangement, then rehearse over the remaining stems.
Use the isolated output to hear timing, bends, slides, vibrato, and articulation more clearly.
Remove the original guitar and play against drums, bass, and vocals to check feel and consistency.
Prepare guitar references before recording replacement parts or adapting a song for a different lineup.
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, AI stem splitter, audio separation.
Yes. Use a 6-track split when guitar should have its own output, then preview the result before exporting it.
Yes. Use the other stems as a play-along reference and keep the guitar stem available for comparison.
Not always. Distortion, layered keyboards, reverb, and doubled parts can leave bleed in the guitar or other stems.
Choose 6-track when guitar needs its own stem. Use 4-track when the guitar can remain grouped with other instruments.