· By Bas Lefeber
Vocalfy has built a solid vocal marketplace. They've got a large catalog, decent variety across genres, and they've made it easy to browse vocals online. If you're looking for volume, Vocalfy delivers. But volume isn't everything. And if you've spent time on Vocalfy, you've probably noticed: finding the right vocal takes longer than it should. That's where a lot of producers start looking for something different. What Vocalfy Does Well Credit where it's due. Vocalfy has one of the larger vocal catalogs out there. If you want options, they have them — across genres, styles, and vocal types. They also...
· By Bas Lefeber
Key Takeaway There are five main ways to find acapellas in 2026: dedicated vocal marketplaces, YouTube rips, AI stem separation, free acapella sites, and commissioning a vocalist. Each comes with real trade-offs in quality, licensing, and cost. If you want studio-quality vocals with clear licensing, a vocal marketplace is the fastest path. If you want free, expect compromises. Every producer hits the same wall eventually. You've got the beat. The arrangement is there. The mix sounds right. But the track needs a vocal — and you don't have one. Finding acapellas used to mean digging through forum threads, trading files...
· 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...