About DoreArt AI
DoreArt AI began with a creator, a finished video, and a song she could hear in her head but could not find.
Last updated: 2026-07-18
It started with a song she could not find
This story started with my wife and me.
She is a content creator. She loves using video to hold on to little pieces of life, tell stories, and share the way she sees the world. She can spend hours on a clip that lasts only a few seconds—fine-tuning the pacing, the color, the cut between two shots, and all the details most people may never notice.
But the part that caused her the most trouble was often not the editing. It was the music.
Sometimes the video was finished, but she still could not bring herself to publish it. The music she found might have the wrong mood, miss the rhythm of the images, or sound so familiar that it made her work feel like everyone else’s. She usually knew exactly what she wanted to feel. She just did not have an easy way to turn that feeling into sound.
I remember one night in particular. She played the same section of a video over and over, changing the background track each time. One version was too bright. Another was too slow. A third was close, but somehow still not hers.
Finally, she looked over at me and said:
“I know what it should feel like. I just can’t find the song.”
That sentence stayed with me.
A simpler way to begin
I started wondering what would happen if creators did not have to learn complicated music software or search through an endless library of almost-right tracks. What if they could simply describe the scene, the emotion, and the pace—and get a piece of music that actually belonged with the work they were making?
At first, I was only trying to solve one problem for one person I loved.
Then I started listening to more creators, and I realized how familiar that problem was. Video makers were looking for music that moved with the picture. Game developers wanted sounds that felt native to the worlds they were building. Podcasters needed an atmosphere that supported a conversation without taking it over. Songwriters had lyrics, fragments of melody, or a feeling they could not yet explain, and wanted to hear what those ideas might become.
The wish was often there. The tools were the difficult part.
Music-making can ask for expensive equipment, years of practice, a lot of time, and the confidence to know where to start. Many people have something worth expressing, but never get past that first barrier.
That is why we built DoreArt AI.
From a feeling to something you can hear
With DoreArt AI, a song can begin with a sentence, a lyric, a mood, or a picture in your mind. You can describe what you are trying to say, then shape the result by exploring different styles, tempos, voices, and instruments.
The first result does not have to be perfect. It only has to give your idea somewhere to go.
An unfinished thought can become a melody. A scene can find its atmosphere. A line of lyrics can finally have a voice. Once an idea exists in sound, you can listen to it, react to it, change it, and make it feel more like your own.
That is the moment we care about most: the quiet surprise of hearing something that used to exist only in your head.
Technology should make more room for creativity
We do not believe AI should replace the person who has something to say. The meaning still comes from the creator—the memory behind the lyric, the reason a scene matters, the feeling that makes a song worth making.
Our job is to remove some of the steps that get in the way. We want to make the distance between an idea and a piece of music shorter, so people can spend more time imagining, directing, and telling their stories.
We are building DoreArt AI for the creator working late after everyone else has gone to sleep, the developer making a game one piece at a time, the songwriter with a notebook full of unfinished lines, and anyone who has ever thought, “I can hear it, but I do not know how to make it.”
Music does not have to begin in a professional studio. It can begin with a rough idea, a half-finished video, or a conversation between two people at the end of a long day.
Where we are going
I first wanted to help the person I love find the sound for her work. Now, we want to help more people bring the sounds in their own heads into the world.
Our vision: Let every idea have a voice of its own.
Our mission: Use AI to shorten the distance between inspiration and music.
Every worthwhile idea deserves a chance to be heard. We hope DoreArt AI can help make that first step a little easier.
