London-based Mozart AI has raised $6 million
in an oversubscribed seed funding round led by Balderton Capital. The round
included participation from Mercuri, EWOR, Kevin Hartz, Charles Ferguson, and
Emery Wells, alongside existing investors and strategic angel backers from the
music, AI, and creator technology sectors.

The round follows a pre-seed round raised earlier
this year, bringing the company’s total funding to more than $7 million. Mozart
AI has also launched its mobile application.

Mozart AI is developing an AI-native digital
audio workstation that combines traditional music production with AI-assisted
and prompt-driven workflows. The platform supports both ground-up composition
and agent-based music creation, enabling users to work with varying levels of
technical involvement.

The software includes tools for stem
generation, MIDI progressions, drum patterns, synth and effect creation, and
sound remixing, while also automating time-intensive production tasks such as
quantisation and time stretching. Users can also create accompanying music
videos and share content directly on social media platforms.

Throughout the creative process, users retain
full control over their work and ownership of their copyrights, using AI as a
support tool to reduce technical friction. Mozart AI is built on commercially
cleared third-party generative models, and the company notes that its model
providers are trained on licensed material, allowing music created on the
platform to be used for commercial purposes.

Commenting on the funding, Sundar Arvind, CEO
and co-founder of Mozart AI, said:

Mozart AI is building powerful generative
tools for the next era of collaborative music creation that will enable every
artist – from casual creators to professional producers – to turn any idea into
a release-ready song in minutes, with commercial rights.
We’re building toward a world where a spark
of creativity – a guitar riff, a melody, an idea – can be transformed into a
fully produced, monetisable song with a professional music video, without
requiring technical knowledge or fragmented tools.

Since its beta launch in September, Mozart AI
reports strong early adoption, with more than 100,000 users registering within
the first two months and over one million songs created on the platform.

The funding will be
used to grow the team, expand the company’s core technology, and prepare for a
full public release.