This guest post was written by team at Muse.
When the world went remote after Covid, every industry had to rethink how people work together. For musicians, it was especially challenging - creativity thrives on connection, and making music apart just didn’t feel the same.
For Luis Caballero, a music producer and software engineer from Oklahoma, this reality hit even before the pandemic. After moving to LA in 2019, he quickly realized how difficult it was to collaborate with friends back home. What was once a seamless, in-person process suddenly required multiple apps, complicated audio setups, and expensive subscriptions.
Making music is rarely a solo endeavor. It involves coordinating writers, producers, artists, and even engineers, which usually requires being in the same space, with the same tools, hearing the same sounds.
But for many artists, that isn’t always possible. Travel and studio fees add up quickly, and the most compatible collaborators don’t necessarily live in the same city, forcing creatives to share projects and ideas through emails and text messages. These back and forth exchanges disrupt creative momentum and make remote collaboration feel like a compromise instead of an opportunity.
It was these very challenges that inspired Luis and a small team of creators to build Muse, a platform designed to make remote sessions feel as natural as being in the same room without the complexity or cost of existing solutions.
Launched in 2021, Muse quickly gained traction in the music community, proving that remote collaboration didn’t have to be clunky or creatively limiting. Even as the world returned to in-person work, remote workflows remained essential for many creators, and Muse became a tool artists, producers, engineers, and educators around the world rely on.
Muse works like a virtual studio. Think Zoom, but built specifically for music creators. Rather than piecing together multiple tools, creators get an all-in-one platform featuring:
Now, creatives can create music together in real-time no matter where they are in the world.
Want to try it out for yourself? Download the Muse app for free.
Remote collaboration is becoming a core part of how music gets made today. Muse grew out of the real challenges artists face, making it easier to stay connected with existing collaborators while also opening the door to new ones beyond their local circles. As the industry continues to evolve, tools like Muse are shaping a future where distance doesn’t get in the way of great music.