Finishthesongsyoustart.
One musically-grounded question per session — grounded in real audio, not generic prompts.
Not advice. Observations you can use.
The Listener hears the actual notes, chords, and structure in your recording — then asks one question that cuts through the noise. You keep creative control; it keeps you moving.
Every song keeps its own thread — voice memos, your replies, and the Listener's questions in one place. Pick it up days later; the context is still there.
Pick who you need for today's song.
Each one has their own musical ear and their own way of asking. Each one hears the audio you just recorded, not a generic prompt.
RayThe Chord SageChord voicings, progressions, key centres, and what the harmony is actually doing.
MaraThe Lyric MusePushes you past vague emotion toward the precise image that makes a line unforgettable.
NiaThe Voice FinderMelody first, voice equally — specific intervals and phrasing for any tune-carrying instrument, plus how to deliver it.
DexThe Song ArchitectStructure, rhythm, dynamics — how the whole song moves through time and where it stalls.
CassThe Creative OracleAsks the one question that cracks the song open when you're stuck or second-guessing.
What Draft actually does between sessions.
One song. One conversation.
Voice memos, your replies, and the Listener's questions all threaded under each song. Come back three days later — the context is still there.
Capture ideas before they fade.
Tap record, tag the section (verse, chorus, bridge, pre), move on. The Listener hears what you sang, not what you typed.
Every half-finished idea, findable.
Segment filters for In Progress and Finished, voice memos with section tags, and the nudge banner that says "You haven't added anything in 3 days. Pick up where you left off?"
Record it. Tag it. Hear what it's really doing.
Two tools that live outside the chat.
Sometimes you just need a chord or a tuner — no AI, no question. These sit one tap away in the library, so you can reach for them mid-session without breaking flow.
Pick a key — see every diatonic chord, graded by how often it appears in real songs.
Tap any string, play a note — the needle tells you how close you are in cents.
Three quick games that sharpen the ear you actually use when writing.
Draft, Setlist, Studio and Spotlight. One app. Cancel anytime.