· By Bas Lefeber
You've got an acapella. Now what? Whether you found it on The Vocal Market, ripped it from a stem, or recorded it yourself — the vocal is only as good as how you use it. A great acapella dropped into the wrong key or tempo sounds terrible. A mediocre vocal in the right context can sound amazing. Here are 5 ways producers are using acapellas in 2026, with practical tips for each approach. Before You Start: Key and BPM Matching This is step zero. Skip it and everything else falls apart. Finding the Key If the acapella comes with key...
· By Bas Lefeber
Finding good vocal sample packs is harder than it should be. Most sample platforms bury vocals inside massive general libraries. You search "vocal," get 50,000 results — and 90% of them are one-word chops, breathy textures, or vocal FX that won't carry a track. If you actually need a vocal to build a production around — a full acapella, a hook, a verse — the generic platforms aren't built for that. Here's where to find vocal sample packs that are actually worth your money in 2026. What Makes a Good Vocal Sample Pack? Before we get into specific options, here's...
· By Bas Lefeber
Quick Summary There's no single best place to buy acapellas — it depends on what you need. Dedicated vocal marketplaces (The Vocal Market, Vocalfy, Voclio) give you the most focused experience. General sample platforms (Splice, Loopmasters) have vocals buried in larger libraries. Fiverr and SoundBetter let you commission custom vocals. Looperman is free but inconsistent. This guide breaks down all seven honestly. If you're a music producer looking for acapellas, you've probably noticed: the options in 2026 are very different from what they were a few years ago. Dedicated vocal marketplaces exist now. General sample platforms have expanded their vocal...
· By Bas Lefeber
Quick Summary The best Splice alternative depends on what you need. For vocals and acapellas: The Vocal Market. For royalty-free loops and one-shots: Loopcloud or LANDR. For sampling real records: Tracklib. For free sounds: Looperman or Freesound. We compare 10 platforms below. Splice changed music production when it launched. Millions of samples, a credit-based subscription, and a clean interface that made browsing easy. For years, it was the default choice for producers who needed sounds. But the landscape has shifted. Prices have gone up. Credits expire if you cancel. The catalog has grown so large that finding what you actually...
· By Bas Lefeber
Key Takeaway Cover remixes tap into existing audiences, get discovered through Shazam and search, and are one of the few types of vocal content that AI can't legally replace. The total cost to release one? Under $75. Scroll through any dance music chart right now and count the covers. Remixes of 90s classics. House flips of pop hits. Techno reworks of R&B tracks. DJs and producers are releasing more cover versions than ever — and it's not a coincidence. Cover remixes have become one of the fastest ways to get streams, build an audience, and actually make money from your...