The only way to hear it.
Everything is available everywhere, always.
This isn't.
Some songs will never be on any platform. They live on our servers and nowhere else — not on your phone, not in a cloud you can reach, not for sale twice.
Each release exists as a small number of physical runes. Hold one, and the song is yours to open.
Tap the rune. The signal opens. The song plays — once. To hear it again, tap again.
Not made for everyone. Made for the 150.
Touch a rune to any phone and the signal opens instantly — artwork, halo, sound. The song streams from our servers and never touches the device.
When it ends, the signal closes. Tap again to reopen it. Every play is a small ceremony, the way hearing something rare should be.
Each release is cut to a fixed number of runes, designed with the artist. Your number is engraved. When they're gone, they're gone — no re-presses, ever.
Touch the rune to your phone. No app, no account, no password. Inside the rune, a chip answers our servers with a code that can never be repeated or copied.
The song streams and never touches your device. When it ends, the signal closes. Tap again to reopen it. The tap is the ritual.
Every drop is a different object, designed with the artist — cast, engraved, numbered, and sealed. The chip inside answers to our servers alone. It cannot be copied. Neither can what it opens.
No. Nothing on a blockchain, nothing speculative. A rune is a physical object that opens a song. Closer to a concert ticket that never expires.
Correct — nobody does. The song exists on our servers and inside the edition, nowhere else. That's not a restriction; it's the entire point. You own access no one else can have, not a copy everyone has.
Then the song is gone for you, like losing a ticket stub from a night you loved. Each rune is registered and numbered — we can retire a lost rune so no one else can use it, but we never mint replacements into the edition.
Any modern iPhone or Android — if your phone can tap to pay, it can open a rune. No app required; the signal opens in your browser.
Artists keep their rights and roughly 80% of every sale. A sold-out edition of 150 runes pays what millions of streams pay — from the fans who care most, for a song that stays scarce forever.
The first signal opens soon.
150 runes. One song. Nowhere else.
One email when the drop opens. Nothing else, ever.