Introducing Voice Studio: Copyright-Free Audio for Creators
Today we are launching Voice Studio, a desktop app that generates copyright-free music and speech for content creators. Runs 100% locally on your Mac.
We built Voice Studio because content creators deserve better audio tools. Tools that do not charge monthly fees, do not send your data to the cloud, and do not come with restrictive licenses.
Voice Studio is a native macOS app that generates copyright-free speech and music entirely on your device. It includes natural text-to-speech in 10+ languages, instant voice cloning, custom voice design, and an AI music generator.
Every piece of audio you generate is yours. No royalties, no attribution required, no copyright claims. Use it in YouTube videos, podcasts, TikTok clips, Instagram Reels, or any other content.
The app runs on Apple Silicon and Intel Macs, requires no internet connection after activation, and costs $99 as a one-time lifetime purchase. No subscriptions, no usage limits.
We believe creative tools should respect your privacy and your wallet. Voice Studio is our first step toward making professional-quality AI tools accessible to every creator.
The origin story is simple. Our team spent years paying monthly bills across ElevenLabs, Suno, and Epidemic Sound just to ship weekly videos, and the math kept getting worse as projects scaled. We watched talented independent creators cut voiceovers from their workflows because the per-character meter did not fit a bootstrapped budget. That frustration turned into a product brief: ship a desktop app that pairs neural speech synthesis with local music generation, charges once, and respects the user. The result is an ElevenLabs alternative that does not treat your catalog as training data or hold your output behind a credit wall.
We made three design decisions early. The first was to ship only what runs fast on Apple Silicon, because latency is the thing that breaks a creative flow. The second was to bundle both speech and music in one window, so creators do not context-switch between tabs to stitch a ninety-second short together. The third was to charge a single price that matches the lifetime of a laptop, which is how most creators think about their tools anyway. Everything else, from the batch queue to the voice design sliders, flows from those three commitments rather than a feature spreadsheet.
Who is Voice Studio for? It is built for creators who publish often enough that a subscription meter becomes a tax on their craft: daily YouTubers, weekly podcasters, course authors, indie game developers, audiobook narrators, and solo marketers running lean. If you have ever deleted a draft because an extra take would push you over your monthly quota, this app exists to remove that constraint. It is also a fit for small studios that want voice cloning without uploading audio to a vendor whose retention policy might change next quarter.
What Voice Studio is not: it is not a cloud API for backend developers, and it is not a replacement for a studio microphone when the project calls for a live performance. We do not stream voices in real time to web apps, and we do not integrate with customer support platforms that need per-second billing. If your use case is an IVR system or an interactive avatar, a cloud vendor is still the right pick. For everyone producing finished audio as part of a creative pipeline, on-device generation is the better trade.
The roadmap from here is public and grounded. We are finishing a Windows beta for creators still on Intel or PC workstations, expanding the library past the ten shipping languages toward a proper regional spread, and adding a project file format so you can save batch jobs alongside their source scripts. Every update is a free addition to the $99 lifetime license. We will not introduce a subscription tier, we will not add a watermark, and we will not change the ownership terms on the audio you generate. Those are the lines we drew on day one.
A final note on the principles that shaped the product. Every feature had to pass three tests before it shipped: does it run without an internet connection, does it respect the privacy of the person using it, and does it add real production value rather than novelty. Features that failed any test were cut even when they looked good in a demo. The result is an app that fits the working habits of a creator who treats their craft as a profession rather than a hobby, and an ElevenLabs alternative that does not treat your voice data as a product input. We think that combination is what the next decade of creative tools should look like, and Voice Studio is our first attempt to build it.
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Voice Studio