Split vocal and instrumental
Create a clear voice-versus-backing-track result when you need separate outputs from a finished song.
Vocal and music separation
Separate vocals from music when you need a clean voice output, a backing track, or both. Use the split that fits your remix, practice, study, or editing workflow.
Upload a file, select a separation mode, preview the results, and download only the tracks you need.
The useful outcome is not just separation itself. It is getting the right set of tracks for the job you need to finish next.
Create a clear voice-versus-backing-track result when you need separate outputs from a finished song.
Switch to 4 or 6 stems when the project also needs drums, bass, guitar, piano, or other instrument groups.
Use the same separation workflow for common audio files and supported video uploads with embedded music.
The direct route is usually a 2-track vocal and instrumental split. Multi-stem modes are more useful when you need to keep breaking the accompaniment down into smaller parts.
Choose a supported file from your device.
Start with vocals and instrumental, or switch to 4 or 6 stems for finer control.
Listen to the vocal and backing track before deciding what to export.
Keep the vocal, the instrumental, or the broader stem set for the next editing step.
Separate vocal and music outputs are useful in different ways depending on whether you are creating, studying, or cleaning up source material.
Separate the vocal before changing tempo, rebuilding the arrangement, or layering the performance over a new instrumental.
Use the instrumental for sing-alongs or keep the vocal for phrase-by-phrase study and coaching.
Compare the vocal against the backing track or multi-stem outputs to understand how a production is put together.
Pull apart the lead vocal and music bed when you need cleaner material for review, demonstration, or repurposing.
A mixed stereo file does not contain perfect standalone tracks. The separator estimates the vocal and the accompaniment, so results can vary with the mix.
Dense arrangements, stacked harmonies, reverb tails, bright cymbals, distortion, and low-bitrate files can all leave bleed or artifacts in the separated outputs. Preview the result before using it as a final asset.
If you mainly want the vocal stem, see the vocal extractor. If you want the broad stem layout decision page, use the AI stem splitter.
A vocal separator splits a mixed song into separate outputs so the voice and the accompaniment can be reviewed, edited, or downloaded independently.
Upload the file, choose a separation mode, preview the vocal and instrumental outputs, then download the tracks that fit your workflow.
That search is usually referring to separate vocals from music. The tool here handles that task by splitting a mixed song into vocal and backing-track outputs.
Use 2-track when you only need vocals and instrumental. Use 4 or 6 stems when you also want the rest of the mix divided into drums, bass, guitar, piano, or other instrument groups.
Not always. Dense mixes, heavy effects, low-bitrate files, and overlapping frequencies can leave bleed or artifacts in either output.
Only if you have the rights to the original recording and composition. Separation is a technical process and does not change ownership or licensing requirements.