
DropCue
DropTrack
Label Engine
DistroKid
TuneCore
Ditto Music
Amuse
Hypeddit
MusicJet
Songwhip
DropCue
Label EngineNo features have been listed yet.
DropCue's answer
DropCue was created by Tonal Chaos, a music licensing company that experienced firsthand the frustrations of pitching music with clunky, overpriced tools. We built the platform we wished existed โ simple, affordable, and designed around how music professionals actually share and review tracks.
DropCue's answer
DropCue is built specifically for music pitching and sync licensing workflows. Unlike generic file sharing tools, it includes timestamped comments so supervisors can leave feedback at exact moments in a track, audio snippets that highlight the best sections, and real-time analytics showing who listened, how long, and which tracks got the most plays. Alternative mixes automatically nest under parent tracks, keeping playlists clean and organized.
DropCue's answer
DropCue starts at $5/month โ less than half the price of competitors like DISCO ($27/month). Analytics are included on every plan, while competitors charge $10-29/month extra. The interface is simple and music-focused, so there's no steep learning curve. You get branded portfolio pages, password-protected links, timestamped feedback, and a music inbox all in one platform.
DropCue's answer
React, TypeScript, Supabase, Tailwind CSS, and Netlify.
DropCue's answer
Composers, artists, and music producers who pitch music for sync licensing in TV, film, and advertising. Music supervisors who review and select tracks for projects. Sync agencies and publishers who manage catalogs and share curated selections with clients.
DropCue's answer
DropTrack - Thousands of record labels and artists trust DropTrack to promote their music and get feedback from global DJs, blogs, radio, and industry contacts.
DistroKid - Unlimited uploads to iTunes and more. Keep 80-100% of your royalties.