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SoundPage Launches All-in-One Storefront for Music Producers

  • Writer: Ezra Sandzer-Bell
    Ezra Sandzer-Bell
  • 5 hours ago
  • 7 min read
SoundPage banner

Soundpage is a new store builder designed specially for music producers, in partnership with the sample marketplace and music tech company WAVS. They launched in May 2026 and are solving many of the core challenges I've faced as a musician selling my work online. If you've struggled with the same issues, I'd encourage you to keep reading.


Here's the typical stack that we deal with: A Linktree page for our social bios, an automation tool like MailChimp to collect emails and send campaigns, a third party marketplace like Beatstars or WAVS to sell and license our music, a Patreon for soliciting membership subscriptions, and maybe an entry level CMS like Shopify or Squarespace where we can sell additional merch.


The problem I've run into is that store builders like Shopify and Squarespace were not created with audio in mind. Yes, there are add-ons and apps you can install in those tools to enable audio preview, but the interface and user experience is not very good. This is why many of the biggest producers end up building their own custom sites, but we're musicians not webmasters.


SoundPage collapses the whole complicated tech stack into a single page builder. They hooked me up with a free account and I've confirmed that everything works as advertised. I had the basics of my store up in less than thirty minutes, with my preferred colors and sample pack assets.


Audio preview and playback tools are probably the biggest differentiator here. The SoundPage audio tool includes options to loop and pitch shift samples, which helps your prospects audition content before making a decision. As the store admin, you get transparent analytics for plays and purchases, so you can see which material converts the best.


To get started, all you need to do is claim a free account, build out your page, and link your fans to the site. SoundPage is where they go to stream your latest release, buy a beat, grab a sample pack, subscribe to a membership, or join your email list. They can even buy services from you like mixing and mastering.


That's the whole concept in a nutshell, but I'll go into more detail here so you can see exactly how it works and what to expect.


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How does SoundPage work?


SoundPage is a store builder with a hosted page that lets your fans browse, preview, and buy digital products or services directly. As you can see in the image above, their page builder is divided into two sections. Your store's design is displayed on the left and design customization tools are in the right panel.


Here's an example of the store that I built for my AudioCipher sample packs. Our company usually sells these on a Wix-hosted website, but the audio playback options are very limited. There's a single demo-preview available on Wix whereas SoundPage lets users browse each individual sound.


SoundPage user dashboard

The dashboard above should give you a clear sense of what to expect when you first set up your store. You'll have a list of options on the far left navigation menu, but they won't be meaningful until the store is set up.


So the first thing you'll want to do is click the Products tab in the left menu, create your products, and load in all of your image + audio assets. Here's what that dashboard looked like after I added in a few of my sample packs and VST plugin.


SoundPage product dashboard

Once that's in place, the next step is to click "customize" on the left nav and set up the page layout. You can customize all of the colors on your site using SoundPage design tools shown below. Pick the right font and background colors to match your brand as an artist. An example of those color pickers can be seen below:


Design customization dashboard

The page is built from modular blocks. You add the components that fit your business and skip the ones that don't. For example, maybe you sell products and services, but no memberships. So then you would just select those blocks and omit anything that's not relevant.


SoundPage blocks also include email capture, contact forms, external links, and text blocks to communicate anything important to your store visitors.


The SoundPage audio embed feature


Of all the features at SoundPage, it was the audio embed that sold me on their service. I appreciate that it comes with several different, high quality designs. But the real selling point for me was the musician-centric tooling like option to loop audio, pitch shift, and even sample chop.


There are also a number of convenient hotkeys for navigating between samples. You can skim through a pack using left and right arrow keys, or press space bar to pause and resume. The < and > keys will move you forward or backwards within a single sample (and you can hold shift to jump by arger amounts of time).


Soundpage embedded audio player

All of this serves to make the audio browsing experience more convenient for customers. It was one of my biggest gripes with other services like Shopify and Gumroad, which have lackluster audio tools by comparison.


What does a finished SoundPage look like?


Here's an example of a SoundPage account that I like, from one of my favorite music producers on the WAVS marketplace.


SoundPage demo example


You can visit his website wav.id/hugo to get some hands on experience and better understand how it feels from the customer perspective. This isn't a sponsored plug for Hugo, in case you're wondering. I just like his design + layout.


Here's an animated gif to show you how the shopping cart flow works. It's just like any other ecomm service. You can add items to cart, remove them as needed, and then pay when you're finished. The digital files are immediately available and customers receive an email with the download link.


Shopping cart checkout process

Best for digital files and services, not physical


SoundPage is designed for digital deliverables. That includes beat licensing, sample packs, presets, drum kits, studio time, mixing services, consultations, and custom work. You can also host your singles, EPs, and full releases with smart links out to Spotify, Apple Music, Tidal, and Amazon Music.


Here's what it looks like when you create a new product. You just name it, add some art, choose the file type, set a price, and include a description. Upload the main file that people are purchasing, and you can upload a single audio demo file as well if you prefer.


Product creation interface

The platform is pretty explicit about its lane. If you're trying to sell physical merch and gear, SoundPage is probably not the best fit. I haven't really explored that use case much, but I'd personally feel more comfortable handling physical distribution on a platform like Shopify or Amazon. SoundPage is specifically for producers monetizing digital files and services. It's not a print-on-demand shop.


How much does SoundPage cost?


SoundPage runs on two tiers. The Starter plan is free at $0 per month, but they take a 12% transaction fee on each sale. The Pro plan is $29 per month and drops the SoundPage transaction fee to 0%. You can compare them on the pricing page.


It's worth being clear about what "0% platform fee" means here. Payment processing fees from PayPal or Stripe are separate and apply regardless of which plan you choose, since those are charged by the processors themselves rather than by SoundPage.


The math favors the Pro plan once your sales volume climbs. At a 12% fee, you'd hit the $29 monthly Pro cost after roughly $242 in monthly sales, so anyone selling consistently is better off on Pro.


When someone buys from your page, you get paid instantly to your connected PayPal or Stripe account, and the customer receives their file automatically after purchase. There's no manual delivery and no follow-up required on your end.


Comparing SoundPage to the alternatives


SoundPage positions itself against the specific tools producers currently combine. On their comparison, they stack up against Linktree (link-in-bio), Gumroad (creator store), Patreon (memberships), Bandcamp (music store), Beatstars (beat marketplace), and Squarespace (website builder).


I like this graphic below from their website, that summarizes it perfectly:


SoundPage alternatives

The categories SoundPage uses to differentiate itself are: being made for music, charging a 0% platform fee on the paid tier, supporting email broadcasting, selling beats and kits, full customization, and offering memberships. The argument is that each competitor covers some of these but no single one covers all of them, which is the gap SoundPage is built to fill.


There's actually a competitor comparison page on their site, called SoundPage alternatives, comparing their features to other publicly listed plans as of June 2026. Pricing and features shift over time across all of these services, but the scope of those companies rarely changes. MailChimp and LinkTree are not going to build an audio webstore any time soon.


Transparent store analytics


Audio and sales analytics dashboard

On the back end, SoundPage includes an analytics dashboard that pulls every traffic source, play, conversion, and dollar into one view. I'm sharing a demo of that dashboard from their site in the image above.


You can track page views, plays, conversions, and revenue over time, and see which beats and sample packs are driving the most attention. This is another huge improvement on other ecomm platforms like Shopify or Gumroad, who do not include metrics for plays and conversion rates for sales.


How to get started with SoundPage


Claiming a SoundPage URL is free. You don't need any other preexisting website or service, since the platform is a fully self-contained web store. As I mentioned before, they host the page and all other related services. They provide the final link, handle your email campaigns and provide other tools like discount code creation.


The producer testimonial on their site captures the core appeal well. One user, who runs the page described previously sending people to four different links depending on what they wanted, and now sending everyone to a single page instead.


SoundPage is making a focused bet that music producers want fewer tools, not more. The all-in-one approach won't be for everyone, particularly anyone selling physical products or anyone deeply embedded in an existing platform's ecosystem and audience. But for producers tired of paying four subscriptions and reconciling four dashboards to run what is essentially one business, the consolidation argument is compelling.


The free Starter tier makes it low-risk to test, and the playable sound kits and unified analytics are genuine differentiators rather than just marketing checkboxes. If you've been meaning to clean up a sprawling stack of music-business tools, it's worth claiming a wav ID URL and seeing how it feels.


You can explore the platform and claim your page over at soundpage.com. As always, we hope you found this overview helpful, and you can visit our blog hub to explore more free articles like this one.

 
 
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