Make Guitar Backing Tracks
Turn any song into a guitar backing track. Pull the guitar out and play rhythm or lead over the original band.

Mute the guitar part, keep the band, and practice rhythm or lead over free guitar backing tracks made from songs you already love.
Use AI stem separation to pull the guitar out of any song while the band keeps playing. Build guitar backing tracks, practice rhythm or lead over the original recording, slow songs down, change tempo and key, loop hard passages, and follow live chord diagrams for guitar.
Turn any song into a guitar backing track. Pull the guitar out and play rhythm or lead over the original band.

An adaptive metronome follows the song automatically. Practice against the track instead of guessing where the beat should land.

See live chord diagrams for guitar, ukulele, and piano. Follow the changes as the song plays and move through new sections with less friction.

Slow down or speed up any song while keeping it sounding natural. Work through difficult passages slowly, then bring the track back up to performance tempo.

Remove the guitar-heavy stem to play your own part, or isolate it when you need to learn tone, timing, and phrasing.

Shift the pitch to match your instrument, tuning, or vocal range. Keep the same song structure while making the track fit your setup.

Mute guitar-focused parts and keep the drums, bass, vocals, and arrangement in place while you play.
Isolate the guitar-heavy stem, slow down tricky phrases, then loop them until the timing feels natural.
Use the original song as your backing band instead of relying on generic blues or rock backing tracks.
Yes. Upload a song and use stem separation to remove or reduce the guitar-focused part so you can play along.
Solo the guitar-focused stem to isolate the guitar from the song and study the part, then mute it again when you want to play it yourself.
Yes. It helps you build a backing track from the original song for covers, blues jams, or solo practice instead of hunting for a premade version.
You can make your own for free from any song. Instead of digging through a fixed library, upload a track, mute the guitar, and play rhythm or lead over the original band.
Yes. Lower the tempo to work a solo or riff out phrase by phrase, then bring the guitar backing track back up to speed.
Yes. Pitch shift the backing track to match your tuning or capo position without re-recording anything.
Yes. Repeat a lick, a chord change, or a solo section on a loop until the timing and phrasing feel natural.
Yes. Because the track comes from the original song, you can jam rhythm or lead over real blues, rock, or any genre instead of a generic backing track.