Fadr

Fadr

Join the Nasty Remix Event organized by Tinashe, SoundCloud, and Fadr. This exciting event allows you to remix Tinashe's song 'Nasty' here on Fadr or in your DAW, and upload it to SoundCloud with the

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What is Fadr?

Fadr is an AI-powered music production tool that separates, remixes, and creates music tracks with minimal technical knowledge required. The platform uses artificial intelligence to isolate vocals, drums, bass, and other instrumental elements from existing songs, allowing musicians and producers to work with individual stems without needing the original project files. You can remix tracks directly in Fadr's browser-based editor or export stems to use in your own digital audio workstation. The tool is designed for music producers, DJs, bedroom producers, and anyone interested in remixing or sampling existing music. Fadr currently runs a remix competition with artist Tinashe, where submissions are judged and promoted on SoundCloud.

Key Features

AI stem separation

isolates vocals, drums, bass, and other instruments from any audio file

Browser-based remix editor

create remixes directly in Fadr without installing software

Stem export

download isolated tracks to use in your DAW of choice

Remix templates

pre-made arrangements and effects to speed up production

Community and competitions

access remix events and share work with other producers

Pros & Cons

Advantages

  • No specialised knowledge needed; the AI handles the technical separation work
  • Free to use for basic stem separation and remixing
  • Works entirely in a web browser, with no software installation required
  • Useful for producers without access to original project files or stem packs

Limitations

  • AI stem separation quality depends on the original audio; complex mixes may not separate perfectly
  • Reliant on audio uploads to Fadr's servers; very large files may have limitations
  • Advanced production features or unlimited processing may require a paid account

Use Cases

Remixing licensed tracks for competitions or personal creative projects

Extracting vocals from songs to create covers or acapella versions

Isolating instrumental elements for sampling or educational purposes

Learning music production by deconstructing existing songs into separate stems

Creating remixes without owning the original multitracks or DAW project files