Developer Patrik Skoog let us know that he’s released a new tool, Echoe, that he designed to make it easy to share stems, tracks and other audio files without the hassles of other tools, like compressed previews and expiring links.
Echoe streams WAV/AIFF, has playlists and notion-style folders, share links, comments anyone can reply to, tags, versions, and notes.
Skoog says that Echoe is built specifically for audio workflows, rather than social sharing platforms like Soundcloud, so it’s tailored to the needs of audio professionals.
Features:
Unlimited Upload – Upload masters, demos, stems, and mixes — and also zipped project folders and image files
Instant Previews – Waveform and frequency analyzer playback generated immediately upon upload
Smart Organization – Keep projects tidy with folders, playlists, versioning, file notes, and tags.
Visual Context – Attach artwork to playlists by uploading your own or stock images via Unsplash
Secure Sharing – Create private links for clients and protect sensitive unreleased material with passwords
Time-Stamped Feedback – Collaborators can comment directly on the waveform — toggle on or off per playlist
Echoe is available now. A Free tier lets you try it out with 1GB of storage. If you like the tool, paid options are available, starting at €10/month for 500GB of storage.
Noizefield has introduced Audio Plugin Coder (APC), a free, open-source tool that’s designed to let you create custom audio plugins without coding.
APC falls into the new category of ‘vibe coding’ development tools, which essentially let you use natural language prompts to describe what you want, and the tool does the coding for you.
It’s available now, and tested on Windows 11 and Linux.
Here’s what developer Max Pfetscher has to say about it:
“I’ve developed an open-source tool called Audio Plugin Coder (APC) that uses AI to help music producers create their own audio plugins without needing to know C++ or any programming. The idea came from seeing so many talented producers with brilliant ideas for custom effects and instruments, but no way to bring them to life without learning complex coding.
The project is completely free and open source, and I’m actively looking for feedback from the community to make it as useful as possible.”
Features:
LLM-Driven Development – Designed to work with Antigravity, Kilo, Claude Code, Cursor, or any coding agent.
Deepsounds has introduced Junit, a Juno-style patch editor for the Novation Circuit & Circuit Tracks.
Junit provides a straightforward interface to the Circuit’s synth engine, emulating the look of the Roland Juno 60.
Here’s what they say about it:
“Junit brings back the fun, ease, and sound of the legendary synthesizer!
Create fat basses, cutting leads, classic keys and plucks or warm pads with the signature PWM modulation and the legendary chorus. Perfectly suited for synthwave, ambient, retro pop, melodic techno and house.”
The editor is built on TouchOSC, and is available for Android, iOS, Linux, Mac and Windows.