AI · Afrobeats · Production
The AI-native home for Afrobeats production.
Production tools, licensing, and discovery built around log drums, 808 subs, sparse horns, and real Afrobeats vocabulary.
For producers and artists. Worldwide.
01 — The shift
Afrobeats is global. The infrastructure is not.
Producers are moving culture from Lagos, Accra, London, Johannesburg, Toronto, Atlanta, and everywhere the sound has landed. The business flow still runs through PayPal links, Gmail threads, DMs, and screenshots.
AI music tools hear Western pop first. They miss the pocket, the log drum language, the melodic restraint, the way melancholy can still move a dance floor. Aifrobeats starts from the sound itself.
02 — Try it: vibe search
Live · Powered by Workers AI
Describe a vibe.
We’ll show you what a beat like that would sound like.
This is what producers will tag with and artists will search by. We’re building the catalog now.
03 — For producers
Your beats need rails built for where they come from.
Aifrobeats gives producers a marketplace and AI layer that understands the production language before the upload finishes.
- Upload beats. Auto-tagged by AI.
- AI co-creation: extend ideas, suggest log drum patterns, generate stems.
- License globally. Get paid locally — Paystack, Flutterwave, plus global rails.
- Built for the sound you make, not pop music with extra steps.
04 — For artists & creators
Find the beat by feeling, not by tag soup.
Artists and creators can search the way they speak: by mood, reference, tempo, melody, texture, and moment.
- Search by vibe, not by tag soup.
- Hum a melody, find matching beats.
- Instant licensing. Stems on demand.
- Verified producers. Cleared samples.
05 — Roadmap
From search to marketplace to creation layer.
06 — A note from the founder
Built from Lagos, for the sound already moving the world.
I’m Jerry, building Aifrobeats from Lagos. I also make instrumental Afrobeats and soul as Babaearly, so this is not theory for me. I know what it feels like to look for tools that understand the music and only find systems trained around someone else’s sound. Generic AI music products can describe “African drums,” but they miss the actual language: log drum pressure, sparse horns, 808 weight, vocal chops that carry feeling without crowding the beat. Aifrobeats exists because producers here and across the diaspora deserve infrastructure as serious as the music. The sound is global already. The platform should be too.
Jerry · Lagos