Electro House ghost productions on Your Ghost Production can be exclusive-style listings when the track-specific rights badge and purchase terms support that, but buyers should not assume every Electro House track is exclusive without checking the listing.
On Your Ghost Production, rights are handled at track level. The site can show a rights badge per track, such as “Royalty-free / commercial-use track” or “Non-exclusive beat.” The practical intent of the current setup is that buyers can release and use purchased tracks commercially under their own brand or artist identity, according to the purchase terms shown or linked on the site at the time of purchase.
For exclusive-style tracks, once sold, the track becomes sold and is no longer purchasable. Public preview playback is also disabled on sold tracks.
That means exclusivity is not something to guess from the genre. Electro House describes the style of the music. Exclusivity describes the sale structure and rights attached to the specific track.
A buyer should check the rights badge, purchase terms, track status, file package, vocal source, AI disclosure, and intended use before buying or releasing an Electro House ghost production.
Exclusive usually means the track is sold to one buyer under an exclusive-style sale flow and then removed from further purchase.
On YGP, for exclusive-style tracks, once the track is sold, it becomes sold and is no longer purchasable. The public preview is also disabled for sold tracks.
That gives the buyer a practical marketplace protection: the same exclusive-style listing is not still available for another buyer to purchase.
However, exclusive does not automatically mean every possible right transfers to the buyer. It does not automatically mean full copyright ownership. It does not automatically mean the buyer can resell the track, sell the stems, reuse vocals in unrelated productions, or claim every production element as uniquely owned.
The actual rights still come from the rights badge, purchase terms, Customer Agreement, Terms, or FAQ.
Exclusive-style sold status controls availability. Purchase terms control usage.
No. Buyers should not assume every Electro House track is exclusive.
YGP can show different rights badges per track. The verified platform context gives examples like “Royalty-free / commercial-use track” and “Non-exclusive beat.” That means the platform is built to show rights per listing, not by genre category.
Electro House is a genre. A rights badge is the buyer’s permission structure.
An Electro House track may be exclusive-style.
An Electro House track may be royalty-free / commercial-use.
An Electro House track may be non-exclusive if the badge says so.
An Electro House track may become sold and no longer purchasable after purchase if it follows the exclusive-style flow.
The buyer should read the listing carefully before checkout.
When an exclusive-style track is sold on YGP, the track becomes sold and is no longer purchasable. Public preview playback is disabled for sold tracks.
This matters because Electro House buyers may be purchasing a track for a serious artist release, DJ alias, label pitch, or catalog build. If a buyer purchases an exclusive-style track, they do not want the same listing to remain open for other buyers.
Sold status helps protect that.
But sold status should not be misunderstood.
Sold status does not automatically mean full copyright ownership.
Sold status does not automatically mean every sound is unique.
Sold status does not automatically confirm every sample or vocal source.
Sold status does not automatically allow every commercial use.
Sold status tells you the track is no longer available for purchase through that listing. The rights badge and purchase terms tell you what you can do with it.
Exclusive and royalty-free are different concepts.
Exclusive usually describes whether the track is sold to one buyer and then removed from future purchase in that sale flow.
Royalty-free usually describes how the buyer can use the track under the license without paying ongoing royalties for each allowed use, subject to the purchase terms.
Commercial-use means the buyer can use the track commercially if the rights badge and terms allow it.
Full copyright ownership is a separate legal question and should not be assumed unless the applicable agreement clearly says so.
These terms are often mixed together, but they should not be treated as interchangeable.
A track can be royalty-free but not exclusive.
A track can be exclusive-style but still have specific usage limits.
A track can be commercially usable without transferring every copyright interest.
A track can be original while still using licensed sample-pack elements.
The safe approach is to follow the track-specific rights badge and purchase terms.
The practical intent of YGP’s current setup is that buyers can release and use purchased tracks commercially under their own brand or artist identity, according to the rights badge and purchase terms shown or linked at checkout.
That means an Electro House buyer may be able to release the track under their DJ name, artist alias, label project, or independent brand if the track’s terms allow it.
Before release, check:
the rights badge
the purchase terms
whether the track is exclusive-style or non-exclusive
whether the track is sold or still available
what files are included
whether vocals are present
whether AI usage is disclosed
whether your distributor or label has extra requirements
whether your intended use is normal release, sync, ads, games, client work, or another use
Do not assume unlimited rights. A normal artist release and a paid advertising campaign may not be treated the same way under every agreement.
No. Exclusive does not automatically mean full copyright ownership.
This is one of the most important buyer checks.
A buyer may receive strong rights to release and use the track commercially under their artist identity, but that does not automatically mean full copyright ownership of every composition, master, stem, MIDI file, vocal, sample, preset, or element.
The verified YGP guidance is careful: do not say “full copyright ownership” unless the agreement clearly confirms that. Safer wording is commercial use, release under your own artist name, track-specific rights badge, purchase terms at checkout, and Customer Agreement, Terms, or FAQ apply.
If full ownership matters to you, check the actual purchase terms before buying. If the terms are unclear, contact support.
Electro House is often built around identity, impact, and recognizable track energy.
A buyer may want a powerful club record, a festival-style release, a strong catalog piece, or a track that supports a new artist direction. If the track is exclusive-style, the buyer may value knowing the same listing is no longer open for other buyers after purchase.
That can matter for branding.
If another artist releases the same track, it can create confusion. If the track remains available after purchase, it may weaken the buyer’s sense of ownership over the release. Exclusive-style sold status helps reduce that risk.
But exclusivity is not the only thing that matters.
A track can be exclusive and still not fit your artist identity. A track can be exclusive and still need a different master. A track can be exclusive and still contain vocals or samples that need checking. A track can be exclusive and still be rejected by a label.
Exclusivity is useful, but it is not a substitute for a full buyer review.
No. Exclusivity and originality are different.
Exclusive-style status means the listing is no longer purchasable after sale. Originality means the track is not copied, stolen, misleading, or built from unauthorized material.
An Electro House production can use genre-standard sounds and still be original. The genre often uses punchy drums, big synths, bass stabs, risers, vocal chops, breakdowns, drops, and club-focused arrangements. These elements are part of the style.
The risk starts when a track copies a specific release, uses an uncleared vocal, includes a recognizable sample from another song, relies on remix material, or contains disallowed AI-generated music parts.
On YGP, producers are responsible for accurate metadata and rights disclosures, and YGP can moderate, but mistakes can happen. Users should contact support if they spot an issue.
That means buyers should still listen carefully and report anything suspicious.
Yes, if the producer is allowed to use those materials in a track being sold.
Electro House producers may use drum hits, FX, risers, synth presets, impacts, vocal chops, one-shots, loops, and sound packs. This can be normal production practice.
The issue is not whether any production tool was used. The issue is whether the producer has the right to use that material in a track sold to another buyer.
Some sample packs allow commercial use in finished tracks. Some loops or construction kits may have restrictions. Some vocals may be legal to use but not unique. Some materials may be allowed in a finished release but not allowed to be redistributed separately as stems.
A producer should not submit tracks using materials they are not allowed to sell. A buyer should contact support if something sounds like a known sample, uncleared vocal, or copied release.
Vocals can complicate exclusivity.
An Electro House track may include original vocals, royalty-free vocals, sample-pack vocals, chopped phrases, shouts, toplines, or compliant AI vocals. Even if the track is exclusive-style, the vocal itself may not be exclusive unless the source and terms support that.
On YGP, vocal tracks require producers to declare the vocal source type. Original vocals require vocalist or source details where required. Royalty-free or sample-pack vocals require sample pack name and URL through provenance links if no vocalist source is provided. Vocal impersonation and voice-cloning of real artists are not allowed, and all rights and permissions must be in place before submission.
Buyers should not assume every vocal is unique.
A royalty-free vocal may be allowed for commercial use but may also be available to other producers. An original vocal may be more specific to the track, depending on the agreement. A compliant AI vocal may be allowed under strict disclosure rules.
If the vocal is important to the track, check the source before buying.
AI is a separate issue from exclusivity.
A track can be exclusive-style and still violate policy if it contains disallowed AI-generated music. That is why AI disclosure matters.
YGP’s current policy bans fully AI-generated tracks, AI-generated music parts, and AI-generated stems. The only AI-related exception is AI vocals, and only under strict conditions and disclosure. If AI is used, the AI service name is required. AI-cloned vocals of real artists are not allowed. Udio vocals are disallowed in policy.
For Electro House, this means:
fully AI-generated Electro House tracks are not allowed
AI-generated drops are not allowed
AI-generated basslines are not allowed
AI-generated lead melodies are not allowed
AI-generated instrumental sections are not allowed
AI-generated stems are not allowed
AI-cloned vocals of real artists are not allowed
compliant disclosed AI vocals may be allowed
A buyer should check AI disclosures before purchase, especially if the track includes vocals.
When buying a track on YGP, the buyer receives a downloadable ZIP pack containing the delivered files for that specific track. What is included depends on the deliverables for the listing.
For standard non-legacy tracks, this typically includes mastered WAV, unmastered WAV, stems ZIP, and MIDI ZIP. Vocal tracks also typically include instrumental mastered and unmastered WAVs.
For Electro House buyers, these files can support:
release upload
custom mastering
DJ edits
extended mixes
radio edits
instrumental versions
vocal edits
drop changes
label-requested edits
live performance versions
Stems and MIDI can be useful, but they do not automatically grant unlimited rights. Do not assume you can resell stems, create sample packs from the files, or re-list the track as a new ghost production.
You may be able to edit the track if the delivered files support it and the purchase terms allow your intended use.
Common edits include:
extended intro
shorter radio edit
clean version
instrumental version
alternate drop
vocal-down version
club edit
DJ intro version
new master
label version
However, editing a purchased track does not remove the purchase terms. Receiving stems or MIDI does not automatically mean you can use isolated elements outside the track, resell the files, or create new products from the parts.
The rights badge and terms still control usage.
If your intended edit is part of a normal artist release, it may fit the purchase context. If your intended use is resale, sync, ads, games, client work, or sample-pack creation, ask support before assuming it is allowed.
Before buying an Electro House ghost production, review the full listing.
Check:
the public preview
the rights badge
the purchase terms
whether the track is available or sold
whether it is exclusive-style or non-exclusive
the genre, BPM, and key
whether vocals are present
the vocal source type
AI disclosure
what files are included
whether the track sounds like another release
whether the track fits your artist identity
whether your intended use is allowed
On YGP, public playback is a watermarked preview only, and it plays only while the track is available, not sold.
Use that preview carefully. Electro House can sound impressive quickly, but a buyer should listen for more than loudness. Check the arrangement, mix, drop, energy, vocal fit, and whether the track actually suits your release plan.
Producers should only submit Electro House tracks they have the right to sell.
Before submitting, a producer should check:
Did I create the main musical identity myself?
Are any samples allowed for this sale context?
Are vocals properly sourced and disclosed?
Did I avoid unauthorized remix material?
Did I avoid AI-generated music parts?
Did I avoid AI-generated stems?
Did I disclose compliant AI vocals if used?
Did I avoid real-artist voice cloning?
Are stems and MIDI accurate?
Has the track been sold or released elsewhere?
Is the metadata accurate?
Do I have the right to sell this production?
On YGP, producers apply, get approved, complete onboarding, upload required deliverables, fill metadata and provenance, AI, and vocal disclosures, then submit for moderation. After submission, editing and uploads lock until a decision.
Because editing and uploads lock after submission, the producer should fix files, metadata, and disclosures before sending the track to review.
If an exclusive-style YGP track is sold, it becomes sold and is no longer purchasable through that listing. Public preview playback is disabled.
That controls the YGP marketplace flow.
However, if a producer previously uploaded the track elsewhere, sent private links, used a non-unique vocal, or gave inaccurate information, confusion can still happen. That is why producer disclosures and buyer reporting matter.
If you find a purchased track or suspiciously similar version elsewhere, contact support with:
track title
order reference
screenshots
links if available
explanation of the issue
Do not release the track while a serious rights or duplication issue is unresolved.
No. Exclusive-style status does not guarantee label acceptance.
A label may reject a track because of style, quality, mix, vocal source, AI policy, sample concerns, release timing, or catalog fit. A track can be exclusive-style and still not match what a label wants.
If you plan to pitch an Electro House track to a label, keep your documentation organized:
proof of purchase
rights badge
purchase terms
downloaded file package
vocal source information
AI disclosure if relevant
support clarification if any
Labels may ask where the track came from, whether vocals are cleared, whether AI was used, whether samples are allowed, and whether the track was previously released.
A serious buyer should be ready to answer clearly.
If the rights badge or purchase terms are unclear, contact support before buying or releasing.
Do not guess.
This is especially important if your intended use is not a normal artist release. Sync, ads, games, client work, sample packs, content ID, and brand campaigns may raise additional questions.
A good support question should include:
track title
rights badge shown
your intended use
whether vocals are involved
whether AI is disclosed
whether you need exclusivity
whether you plan distribution, label pitching, sync, ads, or client work
Rights questions are easier to solve before purchase than after release.
Exclusivity should not be used to make claims the terms do not support.
Do not assume exclusivity means:
full copyright ownership
publishing ownership
the right to resell the track
the right to sell stems separately
the right to create a sample pack
the right to reuse vocals in unrelated tracks
the right to upload isolated elements elsewhere
the right to use the track in every sync or ad context
the right to ignore vocal disclosures
the right to ignore AI disclosures
the right to claim every sound is unique
the right to claim project files are included
Exclusive-style sale status is valuable, but it is not the same as unlimited rights.
Electro House ghost productions on Your Ghost Production may be exclusive-style listings when the rights badge and purchase terms support that. For exclusive-style tracks, once sold, the track becomes sold and is no longer purchasable. Public preview playback is also disabled.
But not every Electro House track should be assumed to be exclusive. YGP uses track-specific rights badges and purchase terms. Buyers should check the listing before checkout.
The practical intent of YGP’s current setup is that buyers can release and use purchased tracks commercially under their own brand or artist identity, according to the rights badge and purchase terms shown or linked at purchase.
Before buying, check the preview, rights badge, sold status, file package, vocal source, AI disclosure, and intended use. Do not assume full copyright ownership unless the agreement clearly says so.
They can be exclusive-style listings if the rights badge and purchase terms support that, but buyers should not assume every Electro House track is exclusive.
For exclusive-style tracks, once sold, the track becomes sold and is no longer purchasable. Public preview playback is also disabled.
No. Do not assume full copyright ownership unless the applicable agreement clearly says so. Follow the rights badge and purchase terms.
The practical intent of YGP’s current setup is that buyers can release and use purchased tracks commercially under their own brand or artist identity, according to the track-specific rights badge and purchase terms.
Some tracks may be marked as royalty-free / commercial-use, but buyers should check the rights badge for the specific listing.
Yes, if the producer is allowed to use those materials in the track and sale context. Sample-pack use does not automatically make a track unsafe.
Not automatically. Vocals may be original, royalty-free, sample-pack based, or compliant AI vocals. Buyers should check the vocal source type.
No. Fully AI-generated tracks, AI-generated music parts, and AI-generated stems are not allowed.
You receive a downloadable ZIP pack containing the delivered files for that specific track. Standard non-legacy tracks typically include mastered WAV, unmastered WAV, stems ZIP, and MIDI ZIP.
Contact support before buying or releasing. Include the track title, rights badge, and your intended use.