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DRUM ISOLATORFREE PREVIEW · NO SIGN-UP

Isolate Drums From Any Song

Inputready
Drop a song or video — or tap to uploadMP3 · WAV · M4A · FLAC · MP4 · MOV

A drum isolator pulls the drum stem out of a finished mix so the kit plays on its own, with the vocals, bass, and other instruments stripped away. Isolating drums means running the song through source separation and keeping only the percussion track — the raw material for chopping breaks, lifting fills, and flipping samples.

Get the drum track on its own — kick, snare, hats, and fills with nothing else in the way, ready to chop. Feed in a full-length song and the AI drum splitter hands back the drum stem with its transients intact, so your one-shots stay punchy and your loops stay in time. Preview 30 seconds of every stem free in your browser with no sign-up — sign up free and you can download that preview as a 30-second MP3 sample; full-length WAV downloads start at a $5 Day Pass. Want a drumless mix to play over instead of the kit on its own? Use the Drum Remover.

WAVMP3STEMSstudio-grade separation
Workflow

How it works

  1. 01

    Drop in the song with the break

    Upload an MP3, M4A, WAV, FLAC, or a video file — the full-length audio loads so you can dig through the whole track, not a clip.

  2. 02

    Extract the drum stem

    A GPU source-separation model lifts the percussion away from the vocals, bass, and instruments, keeping kick and snare transients sharp for chopping.

  3. 03

    Scrub to the break, then pull the WAV

    Preview the isolated drums, find the fill or the open break, and download the lossless stem to chop in your sampler or DAW.

Output

What you get

You get the drum stem on its own — kick, snare, hats, toms, and fills with the rest of the mix gone — plus the vocals, bass, and other instruments from the same split, so you can pair the kit with the melody for a full flip. Every file is full-length, lossless WAV with a 320 kbps MP3 alongside it, ready to drop into a sampler or chop on the grid.

WAV · lossless320 kbps MP3per-stem files
Built for sampling

The difference

Transients survive the split

The model keeps kick and snare attacks crisp instead of smearing them, so a sliced one-shot still cracks and your chops land tight on the grid.

Full-length, so the break is in there

You separate the whole song, not a 30-second clip — scrub to the drop, the bridge, or the fill and grab the break or loop you actually came for.

The other stems come with it

The same pass returns vocals, bass, and instruments. Layer the bass back under the drums, or flip the melody over your chopped kit for a full beat.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

How clean are the transients for chopping one-shots?
The drum stem keeps kick, snare, and hat attacks sharp, so you can slice individual hits as one-shots without the mushy, washed-out edge older drum splitters leave. Bleed from the rest of the mix is minimal — busy, distorted masters are harder than a clean recording, so preview before you commit. With a free account you can even download a 30-second MP3 sample and slice a hit or two before paying for the full-length WAV.
Should I chop a loop or pull single one-shots?
Both work from the same stem. For a loop, find a bar where the kit plays alone — an intro, a breakdown, or a fill — and cut on the downbeat. For one-shots, zoom to a single hit and slice at the transient. The full-length file means you can hunt the cleanest pass of each.
How do I get the drum stem into my sampler or DAW?
Download the lossless WAV and drag it onto a track in your DAW or load it into a sampler like the MPC, Maschine, or Serato Sample. Slice at transients, set your chop points, and map the hits to pads. The WAV keeps full resolution, so time-stretching and pitching hold up.
Can I rebuild the groove with the other stems?
Yes. The split returns the bass, vocals, and instruments next to the drums, so you can drop the bassline back under your chopped break, or flip the melody over the kit. It is the difference between a drum loop and a full flip you own end to end.
Do I own the rights to samples I pull from a song?
Isolating the drums does not clear the sample. The recording still belongs to whoever owns it, so anything you release commercially needs the sample cleared or licensed — the same rule as sampling a record off vinyl. For personal practice, beat sketches, and learning, you are fine.
What formats can I upload and download?
Upload MP3, M4A, WAV, or FLAC audio, or an MP4 or MOV video — the audio is pulled for you. Each stem comes back as a lossless WAV plus a 320 kbps MP3, so you can chop the WAV and reference the MP3 on the go.