Pulse turns a label into a destination. A beautiful player. Your own URL. Private drops, fan access, release pages, and Vitto in the back office. Start with one track. Grow into a roster. Share studio records, producer cuts, or AI-assisted music from the same polished home. Live in under an hour. No card to start.
A label is more than files in a catalogue. It is the first impression, the private preview, the launch link, the fan who comes back next week, and the artist page that feels like it belongs there. Pulse gives all of that to labels from day one, whether the music starts in a studio, a laptop, a group chat, or an AI session. Your name is on the door. Your player is the room.
Pulse starts at yourname.pulse.gograb.space. Add a custom domain when the label is ready. The release opens with your name, your artwork, and your sound.
Now playing follows the fan across pages. Drive Mode for the car. Background audio on iOS. Keyboard shortcuts. Lyrics. Shareable timestamps. The link feels like a product, not a file.
Cover art needs fixing. A private link expires. A track ships without clean metadata. Vitto catches the details that make a label feel professional.
We charge for the label workspace. Fans come free. If you sell directly, we do not take a cut. Growth should make the label stronger, not more expensive per listener.
Type the name fans should remember. Pulse claims the URL, prepares the label home, and gives you a clean place to start releasing.
paks-g → paks-g.pulse.gograb.space · about 30 seconds
Upload the single, the demo, the beat pack, the AI-assisted cut, or the first track from the roster. Add artwork, lyrics, artists, and categories. The catalogue updates the moment you save.
22 songs is the current median first-label catalogue. 1 song is the minimum to ship.
Send one link. It opens a fast player with your name on it, works on iPhone with the screen locked, works in the car, and gives fans a place to come back to.
Returning fans skip the landing and resume where they paused, automatically.
You've got a SoundCloud, a Bandcamp, an Instagram, and a Linktree, and your audience is split across all four. Pulse collapses that into one URL you control. Sign-ups land on your page, you keep their email, and the next track you drop is already on the player they bookmarked last time.
Solo plan (Free) covers the first 25 tracks. Move up when the catalogue or the audience does.
Twenty, fifty, a hundred tracks across years of releases. You're past the "is this a thing?" stage. What you need is the unlimited-tracks part, share grants for early listeners, and a back office built for releases instead of notes and group chats.
Indie plan covers the typical full-time-artist workload. Share grants + Monday brief land here.
You use Suno, Udio, Ableton, Logic, stems, samples, session vocals, or your own model workflow. The problem is not making another file. The problem is giving the finished ones a home that feels like a label, not a folder of exports. Pulse gives those releases a catalogue, a player, listener access, and a URL you can send.
Solo works for testing the sound. Indie is where the AI-assisted catalogue starts acting like an imprint.
Five to fifty artists. A shared aesthetic. Currently doing the operations side with a Notion board and three group chats. Pulse gives you per-artist pages, real admin tooling, and a player that represents the whole roster.
Indie plan for most workloads. Move to Studio when you want a custom domain and a dedicated runtime.
You're not strictly a label. You're a club night, a recording studio, a podcast, a school, a game studio, a gym, a cafe, or a brand with its own sound. You want a music surface on your own name without paying a developer for six months of work.
Studio plan most often. The custom domain and the dedicated VM are the bits that matter here.
The best music products feel effortless because the hard parts are already handled. Pulse gives every label its own secure home for music, artwork, listeners, and releases. GoGrab Space keeps it private. Vitto keeps it moving.
Your catalogue, artwork, listeners, and release history live inside a label-scoped boundary. The product feels personal because the data behind it is personal.
Listeners get magic links. Operators use GoGrab Space identity. The admin feels like part of a serious platform because it is one.
The landing, player, artwork, and audio are built for quick starts and repeat visits. Fans should hear the track before they think about the page.
Start on a Pulse subdomain. Move to music.yourbrand.com when the label needs its own address. We handle the certificate and the routing.
We charge for the workspace. Your fans come for free. We don't take a cut of anything you sell, ever. A solo artist who grows from 50 listeners to 50,000 pays the same amount they did the month before.
The Free tier is genuinely free. No card, no trial countdown, no email harassment if you stop using it. If usage is what costs us money, we'll show you the number on a dashboard and ask before charging anything. That's the deal.
If you landed here from a link a creator gave you, the music is probably one tap away. Open the player. The track they sent you should already be queued. If you sign in, your likes and playlists follow you back to whatever device you open next.
Free tier covers the first 25 tracks. Subdomain is yours the moment you pick one. Start with a label, an artist name, a producer alias, or the music side of your business. The first link you send works. The second one works better, because by then the label has started to feel real.