
TrackSensei
AI production mentor for electronic music
Hype can't move this line. Only verifiable outcomes do.
No money. No seat. It doesn't move the price. It goes on your record — and in 28 days reality settles it.
by reality anchor — the price money can't pump
AI. Launched 1d ago on PeerPush, where it placed #101. Today, it's live, but nothing on the site has changed since we started watching. It's anchored at 60 pts.
It placed #101 on PeerPush with 3 votes.
A launch's opening price comes from where it placed on its own board, normalised across all 12 platforms we watch. That's deliberate: #1 on a small board beats #40 on a huge one. It's how a launch nobody saw can still be worth more than one everybody did.
No matter how much money goes in. There is no pump here — you can't make yourself right by buying more. The line only moves on things that actually happened: an award, revenue that grew, a new platform, code that shipped — or silence.
Quiet for 1 day — no penalty yet. Bleeding begins on day 7.
We fetch this site every day and hash what's on it. A founder can post “still working on it” — but if they actually shipped, the page changes. That's the only claim we price: evidence, not announcements. The real question isn't “will this be huge?” — it's “will they still be moving in four weeks?”
The story so farEVERY MOVE, AND WHY▾
Repriced every day, no cliffs. A launch that goes quiet bleeds a little at a time, so there's never a drop you could have run from the night before.
Momentum on its boardDOESN'T MOVE THE PRICE▾
How the launch is moving on its own board, day by day. This is the crowd's attention — it does not move the reality price. Only verifiable outcomes do.
A flat line is normal: votes stop within a day or two of launch, on every board. What's unusual — and what actually counts — is a launch that keeps pulling votes long after its day is over.
About
TrackSensei is an AI production mentor for electronic music producers. You upload your Ableton Live project (.als) or an audio file, and you get back specific feedback on arrangement, sound design, mixing and mastering. Most tools only look at your audio. TrackSensei reads the whole project. It sees your MIDI patterns, your automation lanes, your device chains and your groove settings, so the feedback is about your actual choices, not just a loudness number. The feedback comes as a chat, not a report you have to decode. You ask follow-up questions and get answers tied to your own track. Wondering why your low end feels muddy, or whether your hats are too repetitive? Ask, and dig into the specifics. It is genre-aware. Feedback for a techno track is not the same as feedback for house or ambient, and the analysis adjusts to the standards of the genre you work in. I built TrackSensei because I had the problem myself. You finish a track, you know something is off, but you cannot tell what. Other producers are slow and subjective, and a real engineer is expensive. So I made the tool I wanted: one that actually reads your project and tells you what to fix. Upload a track and see what it finds.
Where it launched1 PLATFORM▾
| Platform | Votes | Counts toward price | Link |
|---|---|---|---|
| PeerPush | 3 | sets the price | ↗ |
The board it did beston sets the price. Every other board only adds to it if the launch also landed in that board's top 25% — because just showing up somewhere isn't an achievement. Listing on twelve directories is free; placing well on them isn't.