Beats To Rap On Experience

Empowering Artists with Beats To Rap On

Chet

Welcome to another episode of The Deep Dive, where we break down emerging tools shaping today’s independent music scene. In this episode, we take a close look at Beats To Rap On — a genre-focused platform dedicated to hip-hop, rap, trap, afrobeat, R&B, and reggae creators.

🎧 Episode Breakdown:

We start with the mission: BeatsToRapOn isn’t trying to be everything to everyone — it’s doubling down on the culture. Their promise is clear: equip artists with the beats, tools, and stage to be heard and seen globally. Learn more about their values and ethos here.

Next, we explore the Royalty-Free Beats Library. This isn’t just background music — these are curated, high-quality, genre-specific instrumentals. Artists get unlimited access and rights to use rap, trap, afrobeat, R&B, and reggae beats forever. Start browsing the beat library here.

AI-Driven Creation Tools:

  • AI Stem Splitter: Instantly isolate vocals, drums, bass, or instruments.
  • Valkyrie AI Mastering: Autonomously master your song with pro-grade polish and a streaming-optimized 24-bit WAV output.

Creator Network & Leaderboards: This platform doesn’t stop at creation — it amplifies. Through its Creator Network, artists, DJs, producers, and even bloggers connect, collaborate, and grow. Meanwhile, the Monthly Top 10 Leaderboards offer measurable visibility based on downloads, streams, likes, and views.

Performance-Ready Features: Want to show off your skills? Submit a 30-second clip to the freestyle board or upload your track for leaderboard ranking. Gain real traction and community hype while reaching new listeners.

Why It Matters: This isn’t just another music site — it’s a decentralized, artist-first ecosystem. Whether you’re looking to master your track for free, split stems without a DAW, or get your song ranked, BeatsToRapOn bridges the gap between music production and real recognition.

👉 Visit Beats To Rap On.com to start your journey.

Okay, welcome everyone to the Deep Dive. Today we're digging into some interesting sources you shared with us. We've got Beats to Rap Mission and Envision, something called the monthly top 10 music leaderboard, and an article on royalty-free rap, trap, hip-hop, and afro beats. That's right, and the idea here is really unpack these documents, see what they tell us about this platform that's aimed at artists in, you know, specific genres. Right, trying to understand their vision, the tools they offer, how they help artists connect and, well, get seen. Exactly. Pulling out the key stuff from what you provided. Okay, let's dive in. Looking at that mission statement source first, what's the big idea? What are they promising artists? Well, their core mission, it seems, is pretty ambitious. Giving every artist and creator the power to, well, create, share their voice, connect, and even shape the future of music. They kind of boil it down to providing the beats, the tools, and the stage, you know, for artists trying to make a name for themselves globally. And it's clear from the sources they aren't trying to be everything for everyone genre-wise. No, definitely not. The materials really emphasize specific sounds. Hip-hop, rap, trap, afro beat, R&B, and reggae. That focus seems pretty central to who they are. Right, building a specific community. Yeah, seems like it. Okay, vision clear. What about the practical stuff, the tools? What do these sources say artists actually get to use? Sounds like more than just a website. Oh, yeah, definitely. A really big piece highlighted across the sources is this royalty-free beats library, which for independent artists is huge. It means they can get their hands on, like, loads of high-quality beats. Rap, trap, hip-hop, afro beat, samples, instrumentals, reggae. The whole spectrum they focus on. Exactly. And the key thing is they can use these beats anywhere, forever. No complex licensing fees later on, that's a big deal. The sources also mention instant download, support, all that stuff. That royalty-free use anywhere part, that really stands out. And the article you sent mentioned different flavors of beats, too. It did, yeah. It breaks down the styles, you know, like boom-bap for that classic storytelling vibe, trapped with the high energy, heavy bass. Slow-fi, which is more smooth, mellow, and even experimental stuff for artists pushing boundaries. So they seem to cover a lot of ground within their lane. All right, so the basic building blocks, the beats are there. But you mentioned tools. These sources talk about technology, too, right? AI specifically, that sounds interesting. Yeah, this is where it gets pretty cutting edge. They're offering AI tools. One of them is this AI audio stem splitter. Stem splitter, what is that? What does it do? It's pretty powerful, actually. You upload basically any track and the AI instantly isolates the different parts. Vocals, drums, bass, other instruments. Whoa. Okay, hang on. As an artist, how would you even use that? What's the point, according to these sources? Well, they list a few things. DJs could use it for remixes, obviously, making karaoke tracks easily, sampling bits of songs without needing the original separate tracks. Right, for production. Yeah, or just, you know, creative production workflows. Yeah. And they make it accessible. You get one free split, or studio quality, they say, every 24 hours. No account needed, even. Really? That easy? Seems so. And the numbers mentioned, like over 14,600 files processed, over 8,000 creators served, it suggests people are actually using it. It's meeting a need. Making that tech free, even just once a day, that lowers the barrier quite a bit. Is there other AI stuff mentioned? Yep. There's Valkyrie AI Mastering. They describe it as an autonomous, agentic AI expert. Yeah, basically meaning it acts independently to achieve a goal. In this case, taking your mixed track and mastering it, delivering a streaming optimized 24-bit WAV file, ready for Spotify, Apple Music, et cetera. Okay. And it apparently gives you visual feedback, too, a MEL spectrogram. It's like a visual map of the sound, so you can kind of see what the AI did. So it's like an AI mastering engineer. What does that mean for an artist trying to get their stuff out there? Well, the idea is to give them access to that professional polish. Making sure tracks sound good and consistent everywhere without maybe needing to hire a human engineer, which can be costly. And again, accessibility seems key. They offer a master your track free e-option. It's sort of democratizing that final step of music production. Okay. So we've got the creative fuel with the beats and these AI tools for production and mastering. How do the sources say the platform helps artists actually get heard, connect with people? Right. That's the stage and network part of their promise. The sources talk about the creator's network. They call it a launchpad. A launchpad for who? Just musicians? No, it sounds broader. Artists, producers, DJs, bloggers, curators, basically anyone involved in the music ecosystem. And they stress it's zero costs, zero restrictions, all about creative synergy. Okay. Synergy sounds nice, but what does that mean practically? What do you do in this network? It's about finding people really. Discovering talent globally, finding collaborators, maybe mentors, or even just super fans. They use the phrase connect and vibe. And a key point is collaborating without paywalls. Collaborate unrestricted. Plus opportunities for discovery, exposure, amplifying your career, essentially. They say thousands are already in it. So it's trying to be an active community hub. That's the goal, it seems. Is there anything more direct? Like a way to just show off your skills quickly? Yes. There's the freestyle platform. That's a specific feature where artists upload a 30-second freestyle video. 30 seconds, that's it? Yep. The challenge is literally, you've got 30 seconds to blow minds. Short, punchy. And how does doing that get you noticed? Well, your video goes onto a specific freestyle leaderboard. Getting recognition comes from people upvoting it, sharing it, climbing that leaderboard within the community. It's a very direct performance showcase. And that brings us to the leaderboards in general, which the sources really focus on, especially the main monthly top 10 music leaderboards. Ah, yes. That source you shared goes into detail. It covers a bunch of genres, right? Not just freestyle. Correct. Separate leaderboards for hip-hop, rap, trap, freestyle, rap, afrobeat, R&B and soul, instrumentals, samples, and reggae. It's meant to highlight the hottest tracks on the platform each month. Okay, hottest. But how do they measure that? How do you get on the list? The source explains it pretty clearly. They calculate a score for each track based on performance metrics. And crucially, it brings down the weighting. Weighting? How so? Downloads carry the most weight, 40% of the score. Then streams are 30%, likes count for 20%, and views are the remaining 10%. Wow. Okay. Downloads and streams together make up 70%. What does that tell you about what this platform values? Well, it strongly suggests they're prioritizing direct engagement and maybe perceived value. Downloads especially are a strong signal someone really wants that track. Streams show repeat listening. It seems geared towards rewarding music that people are actively consuming and saving. Right. Less about just passive listening, maybe. Potentially, yeah. More about active support. So if I'm an artist on there, how do I play the game? How do I climb based on those rules? The source is pretty direct about it. Upload your music, obviously. Then share your public page, your track links, everywhere, far and wide, as they put it. Get the word out. Exactly. And encourage your fans to actually go to the platform and stream, like download and support your tracks there. It's about driving that specific engagement. And the leaderboard itself is live, updates during the month. It runs on Pacific Time, US time zone. And if you make it to number one, what's the prize, essentially? Visibility, mostly. Big visibility. Winners get featured on the platform's homepage for a whole month. OK, that's pretty prominent. Yeah. And they also get featured in two blog posts during that month. So it's a significant spotlight within that community. Looking at the examples in that leaderboard source, you see tracks like an Inquisi and Hip Hop, Murder Boy and Trap, The Reasons I Love You and R&B, straight drop beat for instrumentals. It shows people are using it across those genres. Absolutely. It shows the system is active, artists are competing, and those different scenes they cater to are represented and trying to get that top spot based on those specific metrics. OK, so let's pull this all together. We've looked at the mission, the beats, the AI tools, the network, these leaderboards. Thinking about all this, based on the sources you provided, what does a platform like this really mean for listeners, for artists, for the music industry, maybe? I think what these sources really show is it's an example of how platforms are trying to give independent artists a more complete toolkit. Things that used to be harder to access, you know? Like what specifically? Like easy access to quality, royalty-free beats that lowers a huge barrier, like those AI tools, stem splitting, mastering that kind of democratizes the tech side of production. And then the network and leaderboards provide built-in ways to connect and gain exposure. It's about putting more control, more power directly in the artist's hands. It feels like a direct answer to how tough it can be for independent artists to just get started and get noticed online. Exactly. These sources paint a picture of a self-contained ecosystem. An artist could, in theory, find a beat, use AI to produce and master the track, connect with others in the network, and then compete for attention based on how people interact with their music right there on the platform. It offers a different route, you know, outside the traditional industry structures. We've definitely covered a lot from these sources. The platform's mission to empower its focus on specific genres like hip-hop and trap, the tools, that huge beat library, the AI stuff, and then the community side, the networking, the leaderboards, measuring success through downloads and streams. Yeah, it gives a pretty clear view of how this particular platform is set up to serve independent artists in those specific musical spaces. And thinking about that leaderboard and how heavily it weighs downloads and streams, it really makes you wonder. So here's something for you, the listener, to think about. Given that structure, where downloads and streams are so critical for visibility and success on the platform, how might that incentive system shape the kind of music artists feel encouraged to create? Does it push towards tracks designed for immediate clicks and saves? And what does that tell us about what success looks like in today's digital music world?