In the heart of London, a group of artists and technologists are reshaping how music is made. With the launch of Mozart AI, a revolutionary AI-powered Digital Audio Workstation (DAW), musicians can now turn their ideas into professional-grade tracks faster than ever—without losing creative control. Backed by $730,000 in pre-seed funding, the platform is set to go public on July 16, 2025.
Mozart AI was born out of a shared frustration: that an estimated 85% of music created today never sees the light of day. The founders—Sundar Arvind, Arjun Khanna, Pascual Merita Torres, and Immanuel Rajadurai—know that struggle intimately. Sundar, once a signed artist on Spinnin’ Records, brings to the table both his music career and his experience as an entrepreneur. Alongside him are teammates with backgrounds in AI research, professional performance, and debate at the United Nations, all united by a belief that technology should amplify, not replace, human creativity.
At its core, Mozart AI is not another generative music tool that churns out finished tracks. Instead, it acts as an AI co-producer—a creative partner that responds to natural language or voice commands. Artists can simply say, “create a euphoric 8-bar chord pattern and EQ the lows out,” and the software produces a polished result in seconds. The messy, technical parts of production—quantization, audio effects, sound design—are handled seamlessly in the background. This lets producers stay focused on what they love most: making music.
What sets Mozart AI apart is its philosophy. The team explicitly rejects training its AI on copyrighted music and avoids generating full songs. Their goal is not to replace the human touch but to help artists work at the speed of inspiration. As Sundar puts it, “We’re eliminating friction, not creativity.”