AI Mix Summaries — what the band is really telling you
Forty timestamped comments on a mix is a lot to read. AI Mix Summaries turn the noise into a clear list of what to change next.
By BandVolt
A healthy band leaves a lot of comments on a mix. Forty, fifty, sometimes more — across the verse, the chorus, the bridge, the outro. By the time the producer sits down to revise, they are scrolling through a thread that took everyone a week to write.
The signal is in there. It just takes a while to extract.
Summarised, prioritised, grouped
AI Mix Summary reads every comment on a song version and produces a short summary the producer can actually act on. It groups overlapping notes (“three people mentioned the vocal sits too far back”), separates structural feedback from mix feedback, and highlights anything the band is asking for explicitly.
The output is a punch list, not a scroll.
Built for the next session
Instead of opening forty threads, the producer opens one summary. “Vocal up 2 dB across the choruses. Hi-hat down in verse two. The band wants the bridge shortened by four bars. Mix 1:47 — kick is masking the bass.” Then they go and do it.
You still own the conversation
The original comments are not replaced. Everyone’s notes stay pinned to the waveform exactly where they were. The summary just sits on top.
Metered with Volts
AI Mix Summary uses Volts from your band balance (1 Volt per generation when OpenAI runs). Basic bands get 10 Volts per month; Premium gets 200 per billing period.