Imagine SoundCloud, Dropbox, Discord, Linktree, and Zoom all got rolled into one platform? That’s the question the folks behind suru.music have been obsessing over for years. After a long beta phase, the platform is now officially open to musicians, producers, DJs, and artists of all kinds. I’ve been on it myself for several months as a beta tester, so my own real-world impressions are woven into this. Go poke around and check it out. Seriously worth it.
At a Glance
- suru.music is now open to everyone
- Co-founder Dan Duncan calls the platform an “Artist OS”
- Lossless audio sharing in WAV, AIFF, or FLAC, up to 2GB per file
- Community feedback, mentoring from Gurus like Timo Maas and Pig&Dan, networking
- Built-in analysis system for loudness, dynamics, bitrate, and more
- Three memberships: Listen (€4.99), Horizons (€19.99), Suruverse (€49.99)
- Planned additions: suru Pulse, a browser-based DAW, a personal artist page
suru.music: Everything on the New Platform for Music Producers, Pricing, and My Experience
suru.music: An “Artist OS” Instead of Another Audio Host
Co-founder Dan Duncan prefers to call suru.music an “Artist Operating System.” And the thinking behind it starts with something pretty obvious once you say it out loud: today’s producers are spread across a dozen different services. Tracks go up on SoundCloud. Project files live in Dropbox or Google Drive. Conversations happen on Discord or WhatsApp. Workshops run through Zoom. And whatever’s left of your online presence gets managed through Linktree.
suru.music aims to consolidate all of that into one place. Not just audio hosting or streaming, but the full creative workflow: from the first rough idea through feedback loops, collaborations, mentoring, networking, and cloud storage. One subscription covers it all, instead of five separate services. As it turns out, all-in-one is also cheaper.
Lossless Audio Sharing and Version Control
You can upload tracks in WAV, AIFF, or FLAC at up to 2GB per file. Full DJ sets, live recordings, podcasts, all at full quality, no problem. Multiple versions of a track live inside a single project and can be compared directly against each other, so when feedback comes in you can act on it right away without losing the previous iteration. No more hunting through Dropbox folders for “final_v3_USE_THIS_ONE.wav.”
Members can specify what kind of feedback they’re looking for right in the track description, mix, arrangement, master, whatever’s relevant. This takes the randomness out of community input.
Mentoring From Timo Maas, Pig&Dan, and More
Beyond the community side, experienced producers, DJs, and industry folks are available on the platform as so-called Gurus. Each has a profile you can use to book mentoring sessions or professional services. The current roster includes Timo Maas, Funk D’Void, Pig&Dan, Andreas Henneberg, Francesco Mami, ILLUSION, King Brain, and Pacific Voltage, with more artists reportedly coming on board regularly.
Monthly online workshops cover production, mixing, sound design, and the business side of music. International retreats with mentors from the electronic music world, including Wehbba, are also in the works as paid events.
Built-In Audio Analysis: Loudness, Dynamics, and Technical Quality at a Glance

Every upload gets scored automatically on loudness, dynamics, file format, bitrate, sample rate, the works, and explained in plain language rather than dumped on you as raw numbers. On my own test upload, the system flagged that the file was sitting at -9.8 LUFS, fine for club play, but streaming platforms would knock the level down by around 4.2 dB, and it actually put that in context of what it means in practice for DJ use versus streaming. For producers who don’t yet have a feel for target loudness or dynamic range, that kind of guidance is genuinely useful, and you don’t need separate analysis software to get it.
What’s Coming Next
The team keeps building. Coming additions include suru Pulse, which will automatically generate social media videos for Instagram or TikTok from your music, a browser-based DAW, and a personal artist page meant to serve as a central hub for your online presence.
My Impressions After Several Months in Beta
In daily use, suru.music has pretty much replaced SoundCloud for me at this point. The lossless player sounds noticeably better, uploads are smooth, and being able to compare different versions of a track side by side has made my creative process a lot more organized. For demos especially, the whole thing feels considerably more professional than what you get on a standard audio platform.
The community was the real surprise. Feedback on here is specific, honest, and constructive. People actually dig into tracks and come back with real observations instead of just “sounds cool, keep it up.” That kind of open exchange quickly became one of the biggest selling points for me personally. Networking done right.
And the networking side I find genuinely exciting. Even during the beta I watched producers collaborate on tracks together, put together remix comps, and collectively push finished music toward labels, often with Gurus opening doors and sharing contacts in ways that honestly aren’t standard in this industry. I’ve also been impressed by how present the founders themselves are in the community. Feature requests get taken seriously, and they have a way of turning into actual updates faster than you’d expect.
Bottom Line
Whether the community quality holds after the official launch remains to be seen. But after several months of heavy use, suru.music already feels more polished than you’d expect from something coming out of beta. Producers of electronic music who are currently toggling between SoundCloud, Dropbox, Discord, Google Drive, and Linktree should give this a proper look. If the team follows through on the vision, what Dan Duncan calls an Artist OS might actually become exactly that.
The cost math makes the pitch concrete. SoundCloud Artist Pro runs around €8 a month. Dropbox Plus with 2TB is around €10. Discord is free without extras, Zoom Pro lands at roughly €14. Already €42 a month for those four services alone, and that’s before Linktree, any mentoring bookings, or a separate audio analysis tool. suru.music’s Horizons plan comes in at €19.99, well below that. Even Suruverse at €49.99 lands around the same as those individual services combined, and it actually includes the mentoring, community feedback, and networking that weren’t in that comparison at all.
Price and Availability
Three membership tiers. Listen at €4.99/month is aimed at listeners: lossless streaming, exclusive content. Horizons at €19.99/month is the producer plan: 10 uploads monthly, 25GB cloud storage, four track versions, community workshop access. Suruverse at €49.99/month covers everything: unlimited uploads, 100GB storage, unlimited collabs, livestreams, direct Guru messaging, the full analysis suite, and every feature still to come. Annual billing is available for a lower monthly rate.
More Information
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