Finished Track
Master Recording
Stem separation studio
Separate a song into clean vocal and instrumental layers. Dolami helps creators isolate the lead performance, keep the backing track usable, and move quickly into remixing, covers, karaoke, or edit prep.
Isolate vocals with clarity.
Keep the backing track ready for reuse.
Clean layers for covers and remixes.
Download and keep creating.
Use cases
Use Voice Remover when you need a vocal stem, an instrumental version, or cleaner source material for the next creative step. The workflow is built for fast separation, review, and export.
Master Recording
Remove vocals while keeping mix dynamics intact. Built for covers, karaoke, and live sets.
Isolate lead and backing vocals cleanly. No robotic artifacts, just sample-ready acapellas.
No project files? Split mastered songs into workable layers and start remixing fast.
Clean messy audio by removing music or noise, keeping podcast and video dialogue clear.
How it separates
01
Add an audio file or choose a saved song from your library.
02
Dolami analyzes the mix and splits vocal and instrumental layers.
03
Preview each output, then download the stems you need.
More tools
Move from separated layers into voice changes, new songs, videos, and your saved creative library without breaking the flow.
Explore all appsFAQ
Quick answers for separating vocals, creating cleaner backing tracks, and getting better results from your audio.
You can separate a song into vocal and instrumental parts, making it easier to create karaoke tracks, remix ideas, cover practice files, or cleaner source material for editing. It is useful when you want to reuse the backing track, study the vocal, or prepare audio layers for another creative workflow.
The tool is designed to reduce or separate vocals as clearly as possible, but results can vary depending on the original mix. Some songs may still have light vocal traces, echoes, background layers, or small artifacts, especially when the vocal is tightly blended with the instrumental.
Clean, high-quality audio works best. Songs with clear vocals, balanced instruments, steady volume, and less distortion usually produce cleaner vocal and instrumental separation. Files with fewer compression artifacts and less background noise are easier for the tool to analyze.
Vocals may leave traces when they are heavily mixed with reverb, delay, harmonies, background vocals, or instruments in the same frequency range. Dense production can make perfect separation harder because parts of the voice may be embedded inside the same texture as guitars, synths, or room effects.
Sometimes. If the background vocals are clear and separated in the mix, the tool may reduce them well along with the lead vocal. If they are blended into the instrumental, layered under effects, or used like part of the arrangement, they may remain partially audible.
Yes. The separated instrumental can be used for singing practice, cover demos, karaoke-style versions, remix drafts, or as a base for new vocal ideas. After separation, you can preview the backing track and decide whether it is clean enough for your intended recording or edit.
Use the highest-quality audio file you have, avoid noisy or compressed recordings, and choose songs with a clear lead vocal. Studio recordings with less distortion, fewer overlapping vocal layers, and balanced instrumentation usually separate better. Heavily distorted, live, or crowded mixes may produce less stable results.
Vocal removal changes parts of the mix where the voice overlaps with instruments. This may slightly affect texture, brightness, stereo detail, or background elements, especially in complex songs. The instrumental is generated from the original mix, so removing the voice can also remove or soften nearby sounds.

Drag the playhead to preview how separated results will feel.
Vocals
Lead vocal stem