Artwork version control
Keep a full cover history per track and per deck. Drop in a new crop or a revised tracklist sleeve and the live art updates everywhere, with every earlier version pinned and recoverable.
Trackdeck is built around the way artists and labels actually work — a single track or a whole record, evolving mixes, trusted listeners and downloads you can take back. No public links, no zip files in a chat, no losing track of which mix is the latest.
Built for people who ship records · one track or a whole release
Your masters never sit on a public URL. Audio is streamed through a server-side gate, and every request is authorised on our servers and signed for seconds at a time. There is no static link to copy, repost, or leak — and the moment access changes, playback stops.
Most sharing tools treat a record as a pile of files. Trackdeck treats it as a record. Set the running order, hand over one link, and your listener hears the album the way it was sequenced — intro, segues, closer and all. Reorder a deck and the change is instant for everyone holding the link.
Upload a new mix and it slots straight into the same track, behind the same link. Everyone you shared with now hears the latest — no "v_final_final2" filenames, no chasing people to send the new version. Every previous mix stays in the history, labelled and timestamped, so you can A/B or roll back in one click.
The detail work that keeps an album safe, on-message and moving toward release day.
Keep a full cover history per track and per deck. Drop in a new crop or a revised tracklist sleeve and the live art updates everywhere, with every earlier version pinned and recoverable.
Each recipient gets an inaudible, unique watermark woven into their stream. It survives an MP3 transcode and a screen-record, so a leak can be traced back to a single inbox — backed by a full download audit log.
Comments land on the exact second of a track, so "the snare at 1:48" is a click, not a paragraph. Keep private team notes separate from feedback that's shared with the artist.
See who opened the deck, who actually pressed play, and who heard a track all the way through — broken down by person and by song, so you know where a record really stands.
Set access per recipient: listener for a pure preview, commenter for feedback, collaborator for in-progress decks, and admin for full control. Nobody sees more than they should.
If you allow a download at all, gate it behind expiry, a password and a hard cap on grabs. Change your mind and revoke a single recipient, or hit the deck kill-switch to pull everything at once.
Every stream carries a per-recipient forensic watermark — imperceptible to the listener, but recoverable even after the audio has been transcoded to a lossy MP3 or captured off a screen. Pair that with a complete download and access log and a leaked promo stops being a mystery.
Sharing a record shouldn't be a one-way door. Set links to expire, require a password, and cap how many times a track can be downloaded. Revoke one recipient on their own, or hit the kill-switch to instantly black out an entire deck — the next play simply fails.
Attach time-aligned lyrics that scroll with the track, so reviewers, sync agents and translators read along to the second. Useful for clearances and for catching a wrong line before it presses.
Collect explicit per-track approvals from artists and managers, with a clear record of who signed off on what and when. A record reaches release day signed off — not just heard and assumed fine.
Open the live demo to play with a real deck, then join the waitlist to bring your own catalogue in.
No public links. No leaked masters. Built by a label, for labels.