Sing a cover in another voice
Lay down a take in your own setup, then convert it through any voice in your library. Your phrasing and breath stay intact, so the cover sounds performed, not pasted — only the singer on top is different.
Making an AI cover means taking a song’s vocal and singing it again through a different voice, while the phrasing and timing of the original stay put. Split the stems, swap the singer, mix, and master — all in one place.
Free tier · 30 credits / month · Voice models always private.
Record your own take, or drop the original song on the canvas and run stem separation to pull out the acapella. An isolated vocal with no instrumental bleed converts cleanest, so split first when you only have the mixed track.
Choose a voice already in your library, or build a new one. A Flash clone needs just a 10-second sample and is ready in under a minute; a Pro clone trains from a ~5-minute dataset for studio quality. Every voice stays private to your account.
Run the vocal through the chosen voice. The phrasing, pitch, and timing carry over untouched — only the timbre changes. Lay the new vocal over the instrumental stem, then master to a commercial reference and export lossless WAV.
Lay down a take in your own setup, then convert it through any voice in your library. Your phrasing and breath stay intact, so the cover sounds performed, not pasted — only the singer on top is different.
Record a rough topline and convert it into the voice you are writing for. Send a demo that already sounds like the intended artist instead of asking the room to imagine it from a scratch vocal.
Clone yourself, sing the lead once, then convert duplicate takes at different pitch shifts to build a full harmony stack. The texture stays consistent across every layer because it is all the same voice.
Convert a male lead into a female voice or the reverse while the melody and lyrics hold exactly where they were. Useful for reworking a song for a different artist or hearing how a part sits in a new register.
Re-sing the translated lyrics yourself, then convert the take through the original singer’s voice. The cover keeps the recognizable vocal identity in a language the artist never recorded.
Hum or sing a loose version, convert it into a clean target voice, drop it over the instrumental, and master. A throwaway voice memo becomes a release-ready cover without booking a vocalist.
Stem split, voice conversion, and mastering live as cards on the same canvas. You isolate the acapella, swap the singer, and master the mix without exporting to three separate tools and stitching the files back together.
Every voice model is private to your account. There is no public voice marketplace and no sharing toggle that can flip a clone into a public listing by accident. The voices you build are yours alone.
Converted vocals, individual stems, and the final mixdown all export as 24-bit WAV. Nothing gets re-encoded to a lossy format between steps, so the cover you download holds up at full mix loudness.
Cloning a voice requires an explicit consent attestation before the run starts. You cannot quietly upload someone else’s voice and skip the step, which keeps an audit trail for both you and the original performer.
Conversion swaps timbre, not performance. The breath, vibrato, and timing of the source vocal carry straight through, so a cover keeps the human feel of the take instead of sounding quantized or robotic.
You pay for what you convert, not per login. The free plan ships with enough credits to split a song, swap a vocal, and export a finished cover — no credit card needed to make your first one.
Making one for yourself to experiment with is generally fine. Releasing it is a different question: a cover involves the songwriting rights, and if you convert the vocal into a recognizable artist’s voice you also touch that performer’s rights. Clearing those is your responsibility, and the consent attestation step exists to keep that explicit.
Either works. If you have a clean acapella, drop it straight on the canvas and convert it. If you only have the mixed song, run stem separation first to isolate the vocal. And if you would rather perform it yourself, record your own take and convert that — the conversion keeps your phrasing regardless of where the vocal came from.
Yes. Clone yourself once — a 10-second sample is enough for a Flash clone — and you can convert any vocal into your own voice. It is the fastest way to sing a cover of a part that sits outside your range, or to stack harmonies that all sound like you.
Yes. Conversion changes only the timbre of the voice. The melody, pitch contour, phrasing, and timing of the source vocal are preserved exactly, so the cover lands on the same notes and beats as the take you fed in — it just sounds like a different singer.
The platform allows commercial use on paid plans and exports lossless WAV ready for distribution. Whether a specific cover can be released is a rights question, not a tooling one: you still need the songwriting license for the composition and clearance for any voice you imitate. Handle the rights and the export is yours to ship.
Use stem separation. Drop the full song on the canvas and it splits into six stems — vocals, drums, bass, guitar, piano, and other. Take the isolated vocal stem as your source for conversion, and keep the instrumental stem to mix the new vocal back over once it is swapped.
30 free credits. No card. Split, swap, master, and export — all on one canvas.