Mozart AI Raises $6 Million to Rethink Music Creation

London-based Mozart AI secures $6M to expand its AI-native music production platform, blending prompt-driven tools with full commercial rights for creators.

A London startup aiming to reshape how music is made has raised $6 million in an oversubscribed seed round, underscoring continued investor appetite for generative AI tools tailored to creative industries.

Mozart AI said the round was led by Balderton Capital, with participation from Mercuri, EWOR, Kevin Hartz, Charles Ferguson and Emery Wells, along with existing investors and angel backers from the music and creator technology sectors.

The new financing follows a pre-seed round earlier this year, bringing the company’s total funding to more than $7 million. Mozart AI has also launched its mobile application as it prepares for a broader public rollout.

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An AI-Native Studio

Mozart AI is building what it describes as an AI-native digital audio workstation, blending traditional music production tools with prompt-driven and agent-based workflows. The platform allows users to compose from scratch or collaborate with AI agents to develop melodies, arrangements and finished tracks.

The software includes tools for stem generation, MIDI progressions, drum sequencing, synth and effects design and sound remixing. It also automates time-intensive production tasks such as quantization and time stretching. Users can generate accompanying music videos and share finished content directly to social platforms.

Throughout the process, the company says, creators retain ownership of their copyrights. Mozart AI relies on commercially cleared third-party generative models trained on licensed material, enabling users to distribute music created on the platform for commercial use.

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From Idea to Release-Ready

“Mozart AI is building powerful generative tools for the next era of collaborative music creation,” said Sundar Arvind, the company’s chief executive and co-founder. The aim, he said, is to enable artists — from hobbyists to professional producers — to transform a simple idea into a release-ready, monetizable song in minutes.

The company envisions a workflow in which a guitar riff, melody or lyrical concept can evolve into a fully produced track, complete with a professional music video, without requiring deep technical expertise or multiple disconnected tools.

Since launching its beta version in September, Mozart AI says more than 100,000 users have registered, generating over one million songs in its first two months.

The fresh capital will be used to expand the team, enhance core technology and support a full public release.

As generative AI continues to permeate creative industries, startups like Mozart AI are betting that the next frontier is not simply generating content — but collapsing the distance between inspiration and finished product.