I built what Tidal and Qobuz won't. And people are loving it.


50 days ago I launched Sonic Oracle. One developer, zero marketing budget. 150+ people are paying for it.

I built it because I was tired of the same recommendations everywhere. Tidal's "Fans Also Like" stays surface-level. Qobuz barely has discovery at all. Radio stations disappear when they're done. "Similar Artists" gives you the same ten names you already know.

Sonic Oracle fills the gap. You type in an artist, pick a depth, and it builds a permanent playlist of connected artists saved directly to your Tidal or Qobuz library. Roon, Audirvana, Aurender, dCS, Lumin, Naim, Linn, McIntosh, everything picks it up. About 5-6 hours of music you've never heard, created in under a minute.

No AI. No label deals pushing promoted content into your results. Every recommendation comes from real listener behavior. Every artist is a real person with a real discography.

There's a depth setting going from safe picks all the way to deep cuts no streaming platform would ever surface. That's where it gets interesting.

Thanks to the feedback from communities like this one, the app keeps getting better. New features ship every week based on what users ask for. 

Free to try at https://sonicoracle.music/. Three playlists, no credit card needed.

Alessandro

panyc77

@maprik 

You don't need a desktop computer. If you use Tidal as your streamer, the mobile login is a breeze. If you use Qobuz, the first time you log in, switch to "desktop site" on your mobile browser and follow the video tutorial for the initial setup. After the first time, you'll be able to use your mobile or any other device.

If you get stuck, reach out to [email protected] and I'll walk you through it step by step.

Alessandro

Hello Panyc77.

Just wanted to say thanks for this!  Purchased the lifetime subscription and am loving it so far. Keep up the good work, and thanks for posting about this. I would have never known otherwise!

Casey

Right now the Oracle creates a fresh playlist each time, but adding tracks to an existing one is definitely on my radar. Could you tell me a bit more about how you'd use it? For example, would you want to keep growing the same playlist over multiple discoveries, or more like "here's my playlist, find me more like this"?

That context helps me build it the right way.

 

Alessandro