If you have the song file, you can also see if moises.ai can isolate the guitar track for you. Source: 5 months ago
I also use moises.ai to separate instruments - it gets rid of vocals quite well, usually separates the bass too, athough it struggles to distinguish guitar from piano (understandably). Source: 5 months ago
Instead of a standard media player, you can also use something like moises.ai to remove the vocal (or make it quieter so you can hear the tone, but sing over the top). That way you can try to mix your own vocal into the reference track until it sounds pretty good. You can also solo the vocal to be able to hear it slightly better (although you'll hear artefacts in the delay and reverb). Source: 6 months ago
I've been using the moises.ai app since the beginning of 2023, to isolate a lot of Vinny and Weckl stuff . AMAZING PROGRAM! Source: 10 months ago
Https://x-minus.pro/ai (split vocal from track - no login) Https://beta.covers.ai/ (AI song cover - no login) Https://soundraw.io/create_music (AI generated music - hear a sample no login) Https://moises.ai/ (song mastering, track separation, song writing assistance - login required) Https://www.aiva.ai/ (music composition - login required). Source: 10 months ago
If I'm just making something for non-monetized IG, YT and TikTok I'll either work without stems or get them via moises.ai. If you know the BPM of the song, you can cut and extend or shorten loops even without stems by copy/pasting blocks of the song that are trimmed right on the boundaries of the measures. Source: 10 months ago
Hi all, this thread is for musicians mostly - I recently started using the moises.ai app, and I am making my own isolated backing tracks for guitar. I noticed that there is not a single song that is in standard 440Hz tuning, If we exclude the first 2 albums where we all know that its higher around 448 - I was surprised to see that all other albums, even the newest ones are between 441 to 443, do you think this... Source: 11 months ago
Personally I've been "cheating" when learning songs for over 50 years now. First I would use sheet music if it was available (well aware that it was usually incomplete and sometimes wrong). When I could find no sheet music, then I'd use a 2-speed tape deck - half-speed to get the tricky fast parts, double speed to raise the octave to hear the bass line clearly. For the last 20 years or so I've used... Source: 11 months ago
There are also apps now which separate out the instruments in a mix (usually quite crudely, but still usefully), making it easier to pick out notes in each. E.g., moises. Source: 11 months ago
Has anyone tried https://moises.ai/ - and if so is it any good and worth paying a yearly subscription for? Source: 12 months ago
For people in this post that wanna learn full songs/parts to songs. I really recommend this app moises https://moises.ai/. Source: 12 months ago
I'd pull the tracks up in moises.ai and/or Izotope RX10 Music Rebalance and see if either one floats your boat. It's wild how well they can isolate parts in a stereo track and let you rebalance the parts. They can really find the drums, bass and vocal but then everything else is "Other". So if you're trying to separate say piano from sax then no luck. Source: 12 months ago
If it was important to me to try to do my best for the band, I would try using moises.ai to split the recording into different tracks, load them into a DAW, try mixing the levels a bit by automating the track volumes, add some basic processing and limiting, export the stems, and send them to the band, explaining and apologising that this was the best I could do at such short notice. Source: 12 months ago
I like to use https://moises.ai/ to isolate the vocals. Source: 12 months ago
Https://moises.ai/ and similar do a useable job of taking audio and stripping it down to component parts with ai. Just download the parts you need. Good enough for most backing track needs. Source: about 1 year ago
Moises.ai mostly for separating the background music and sound effects from the full track. Rarely vocal rips are clearer in here than lalal, but it depends on the person's voice and what the background noise is. Source: about 1 year ago
For drumless (personal use) versions of existing recordings in my collection, I use moises.ai to break them apart. Typically I remove the drums, I may mix in a click, and then generate an mp3. I download that and practice to the now drum-free and click-added track. Costs around $4 per month, or maybe $30 a year for pretty much unlimited use. Source: about 1 year ago
This is not exactly new, but it is a good way to separate tracks in order to get insteresting samples: https://moises.ai/. Source: about 1 year ago
[If my reference and context is a cover song, I'll use something like moises.ai so I can include/remove the original guitar easily. If it's my own song, I'll have done a demo arrangement and will use that to dial in my final sound, if I'm not there already just from during the song-writing process.]. Source: about 1 year ago
But you can get apps which isolate vocals from a multitrack recording. They're not perfect, but the isolation is good enough to work out the notes of a vocal for yourself - either with that tuner app, or by playing along with an instrument (as most of us do it... ;-)). Try moises. Source: about 1 year ago
I use Moises for splitting songs into separate tracks. Source: about 1 year ago
Do you know an article comparing Moises to other products?
Suggest a link to a post with product alternatives.
This is an informative page about Moises. You can review and discuss the product here. The primary details have not been verified within the last quarter, and they might be outdated. If you think we are missing something, please use the means on this page to comment or suggest changes. All reviews and comments are highly encouranged and appreciated as they help everyone in the community to make an informed choice. Please always be kind and objective when evaluating a product and sharing your opinion.