notevibes. AI Guitar Extractor

AI Guitar Extractor

Pull a clean, isolated guitar track out of any song — for learning riffs, writing tabs, and instant backing tracks. Runs in the Notevibes AI editor, free to start.

Drop a song to extract the guitar

MP3, WAV, M4A, FLAC…

File Link Record

Opens in the AI editor — sign in to run

Private processing on our own servers — never shared, never used to train AI.
Dedicated guitar stem
Real AI separation
Full editor included
MP3 or WAV export
How it works

How to Extract Guitar From a Song

Drop a song and you’re two minutes from an isolated guitar.

1

Drop Your Song

Drag a track onto the tool — it opens in the Notevibes AI editor with a free sign-in, your song ready to split.

2

AI Isolates the Guitar

Demucs separation pulls the guitar onto its own dedicated stem — riffs, chords, and solos, with the rest of the band on separate tracks.

3

Solo, Mute, or Download

Loop the part you’re learning, mute the guitar to play it yourself, and export the stem as MP3 or WAV.

Why Notevibes

Why Notevibes Guitar Extractor

A separation engine with a real guitar stem, then a full editor to practice with.

A True Guitar Stem

Six stems, guitar included. Most free tools split four ways and bury the guitar in “other” — here it gets its own dedicated track.

Real AI Separation

Runs Demucs, the engine behind many paid stem tools — the guitar comes out full and playable, not phase-trick mush.

Every Other Stem Included

The same split also gives you vocals, drums, bass, and piano — each on its own track, keep what you need.

Practice by Chatting

In the AI editor, just describe it — “mute the guitar so I can play it”, “loop the solo”, “export as WAV”.

MP3 or WAV Export

Download the isolated guitar stem in the format your DAW wants — no watermark, no quality loss.

Private by Design

Processing runs on our own Google Cloud servers. Your files stay in your account — never shared, never used for training.

Private, On Our Own Servers

Your song uploads over an encrypted connection and is processed on our own Google Cloud servers — no third-party AI services touch your audio.

Own Servers

Separation runs on our infrastructure only

Your Files, Your Control

Tracks stay in your account until you delete them

Never Used for Training

Your audio never trains AI models

Made for

What You Can Do With Isolated Guitar

The part, on its own, ready to learn from.

Learning Solos & Riffs

Solo the guitar and pick the part up by ear — every note, right where it sits

Writing Tabs

Transcribe leads and rhythm parts with nothing else playing over them

Instant Backing Tracks

Mute the guitar stem and play the part yourself over the original band

Tone Study

Hear the amp, the effects, and the touch without the mix on top

Sampling

Pull a clean guitar phrase to chop, re-pitch, and build a track on

Covers

Learn the original part exactly, then track your own version over the backing

The Riff You’re Chasing, Pulled Out of the Mix

Every guitarist knows the loop: rewind the same four seconds, again and again, trying to catch a lick that’s buried under vocals, drums, and bass. Slowing the whole song down doesn’t help — you just get a slower wall of sound. AI source separation actually solves it: drop the track here and the guitar comes out on its own, every note in the open.

A dedicated guitar stem — not “other”

Most free stem tools split a song four ways — vocals, drums, bass, and “other” — and the guitar ends up smeared into that last bucket with keys, synths, and everything else. This extractor runs Demucs — the AI separation engine behind many paid stem tools — with six stems and a dedicated guitar track. Acoustic strumming, distorted rhythm, and lead lines land on a stem you can actually learn from.

Mute it, and the song becomes your backing track

The split works both ways. Solo the guitar to study it — or mute it and let the rest of the band keep playing, an instant backing track in the original key and tempo, so you can play the part yourself. It all happens in the Notevibes AI editor: just describe what you want — “mute the guitar”, “loop the solo”, “export as WAV”.

Two ways in — pick your speed

The extractor lives in the AI editor, which takes a free sign-in and gives you the full toolkit. In a hurry and don’t want an account? The free stem splitter returns all six stems — the guitar track included — right on the page, no sign-in at all.

Your music stays yours

Everything is processed on our own servers — your audio is never shared with third parties and never used to train AI. Files in your editor account stay under your control, and you can delete them anytime. Looking for a different part? Try the piano extractor, bass extractor, or vocal remover.

Get the Guitar on Its Own Track

Open the AI editor, drop your song, and say “extract the guitar” — then loop it, mute it, and learn it at your own pace.

Free to start · No credit card required

Keep going

Related Audio Tools

More free AI audio tools from Notevibes — same engine, no sign-up.

FAQ

Guitar Extractor FAQ

How do I extract the guitar from a song?

Drop your song on this page — it opens in the Notevibes AI editor, where AI separation isolates the guitar onto its own track in a couple of minutes. Solo it, download it, or mute it and play along.

Do I need an account?

The guitar extractor runs inside the AI editor, so it takes a free sign-in. Prefer no sign-in at all? The free stem splitter returns all six stems — guitar included — right on the page.

How clean is the isolated guitar?

Acoustic and distorted guitars both separate well — clean enough to learn riffs and write tabs from. Very dense mixes, or parts that overlap heavily with keys and synths, can leave faint traces of other instruments.

Can I get the other instruments too?

Yes — the same separation produces vocals, drums, bass, piano, and other stems. In the editor each lands on its own track; you keep whichever you need.

What formats are supported?

MP3, WAV, M4A, FLAC, and OGG uploads. The isolated guitar stem exports as MP3 or WAV.

Can I use the isolated guitar in my own music?

For practice and study, yes. Releasing or monetizing samples from copyrighted recordings requires permission from the rights holder — for commercial work, sample music you own the rights to.