( Stems )
Leave with stems, not a lock-in
Turn on stems in the export dialog and you get a ZIP of the separate parts of the mix alongside the full episode — the voice on one file, the music on another. Whoever comes after you, engineer or DAW, starts from parts, not from a flattened bake.
Stems are what lets someone else keep working
Hand an engineer a finished mix and they can only adjust the whole thing. Hand them stems and they can turn the music down without touching the voice — which is the difference between a fix and a re-mix.
Generated music arrives in parts too, so the handoff keeps its structure all the way down. Stems export is on Plus and Max; every plan exports the finished mix as many times as you like, at no credit cost.
- One file per lane + full mix
- One ZIP, one download
- Music in parts, not a bake
- Plus & Max
FAQ
01How do I export stems or individual tracks?
Turn on stems in the export dialog and you get a ZIP of the separate parts of the mix alongside the full episode. Available on Plus and Max.
Read more →02What are stems, exactly?
Stems are the separate parts of a finished mix, kept as individual files — the voice on one, the drums on another, the bass on another. A stereo mix is those parts already blended together and no longer separable.
Read more →03Can I regenerate one part of the music?
Yes. A generated track comes apart into its parts, and you can re-roll one of them — the drums, say — without touching the rest. The parts on offer depend on the track: a gentle voiceover bed may have no drums to swap.
Read more →04What do the plans include?
Editing is never metered and never watermarked: transcription, filler and pause removal, noise removal, captions and audio export cost zero credits on every plan, including Free. Credits buy generation (music and SFX); the uploads allowance caps how much audio you bring in. Free: 100 credits, 60 min, MP3 128k. Lite: 700, 10 hrs, MP3 320k. Plus: 2,750, 25 hrs, WAV, stems, commercial license. Max: 6,500, unlimited, broadcast (EBU R128).
Read more →