Rehearsal preparation
Build practice mixes that emphasize or remove selected parts before the rehearsal session begins.
Working tool for musicians
Use NeuralSound as a browser-based musician app when the job is to prepare stems for rehearsal, arrangement study, backing-track setup, or session planning before the real performance work begins.
Upload a file, choose the stem layout, preview the results, and download only the parts your workflow needs.
The value is practical: faster preparation, clearer references, and less time trying to work from a single finished mix.
Build practice mixes that emphasize or remove selected parts before the rehearsal session begins.
Listen to vocals, bass, drums, guitar, piano, or accompaniment separately when learning a song or analyzing how it is put together.
Prepare accompaniment-focused outputs when the performance workflow needs more control than the original stereo file allows.
Share clearer part references with bandmates, students, collaborators, or production teams before recording or performance work starts.
The best setup depends on whether you are preparing one part for practice or a broader group of stems for rehearsal and session planning.
Choose the song or reference file the musicians need to study or prepare from.
Use 2, 4, or 6 tracks depending on how much independent control the workflow requires.
Check which outputs are actually useful before sending or exporting them.
Keep the stems needed for rehearsal, backing-track prep, teaching, or production planning.
This is most useful when musicians need clearer listening material before rehearsal, performance, recording, or teaching.
Pull down one instrument group or one vocal part so the musician can practice against the rest of the arrangement with fewer distractions.
Separate the material each player needs to review so rehearsal time is spent on musical decisions rather than on hunting through a full mix.
Split a reference track into useful groups before deciding how to recreate, adapt, or replace the parts in a studio session.
Use separated tracks to demonstrate timing, layering, phrasing, groove, and arrangement choices in a more direct way.
Working musicians can get a lot of value from separated stems, but the results still depend on the source and the density of the mix.
Dense effects, stacked parts, distortion, and low-quality uploads can all reduce how clean an isolated part sounds on its own. Preview before turning the result into a rehearsal or performance asset.
For the editing-focused workflow page, see the AI music editor. If you mainly need a broader explanation of source splitting, use the audio separation.
It helps them isolate the parts they need for rehearsal, arrangement study, backing-track creation, and session planning without relying only on a single stereo mix.
Yes, in the sense that it is a browser-based working tool for musicians. Its role is focused: preparing separated audio parts rather than replacing a full DAW or notation environment.
That depends on the task. A simple voice-versus-accompaniment split is often enough for rehearsal, while 4 or 6 stems are more useful for arrangement study and production prep.
No. It estimates parts from a finished mix, so it is best used for preparation, study, and working references rather than as a substitute for original session files.
It makes it easier to prepare backing tracks, isolate cues, or review individual parts before rehearsal so musicians can arrive with clearer material and more focused listening.
Only if you have the required rights to the original recording and composition. Technical separation does not change the legal obligations tied to source material.