Single-file source in
Upload one mixed file and let the stem separator estimate separate tracks from one audio pass.
Upload one mixed file and let the stem separator estimate separate tracks from one audio pass.
Test multiple outputs and choose what to export based on bleed, timing, and practical usability.
Move between separation modes when project needs change, without re-creating the full workflow.
Use the best quality version of the song you have and begin from that baseline.
Select 2-track, 4-track, or 6-track outputs to match what you are trying to edit.
Review stems separately and in combination with the full mix context.
Keep the outputs that directly support your next practical step.
Separate stems for mix prep, lesson content, or fast instrumentation review.
Use stem-level outputs to evaluate arrangement edits before large production changes.
Keep outputs limited to what is necessary for the project stage to avoid noisy handoffs between tools.
From remix preparation to arrangement study, a stem separator workflow stays useful when you need independent stems.
Use this route when you need more granular instrument-level control than a single vocal split can provide.
Extract stems for arrangement study, class discussion, and clear demonstration of instrument roles.
Quickly break a song into manageable parts before mixing, remixing, or post-production edits.
Some tracks remain estimated with overlap. Use the outputs as practical guides, then make final creative judgments manually.
A stem separator takes a mixed source and estimates separate component stems for easier editing and arrangement work.
It can support production workflows, but output quality depends on source condition and mix complexity. Validate each track before final use.
Yes, most workflows use 6-track outputs when guitar and piano need independent exports rather than being grouped together.