How Can I Buy A Ghost Produced Track

You can buy a ghost produced track on Your Ghost Production by browsing the available catalog, choosing a track, adding it to your cart, completing checkout through Stripe, and downloading the purchased track from your account purchases after payment is confirmed.

That is the simple version.

The smarter version is this: do not buy only because a track sounds good in the first ten seconds. A ghost produced track can become part of your artist identity, release catalog, DJ profile, label plan, or commercial music strategy. Before buying, you should preview the track properly, check the listing information, understand the rights badge, review what files are included, look at the vocal type where relevant, and make sure the purchase terms fit what you plan to do with the music.

Your Ghost Production is built for buyers who want ready-to-release tracks instead of starting from a blank studio session. You are not commissioning a producer and waiting for a custom result. You are choosing from music that already exists. That gives you one major advantage: you can hear the track before you purchase it.

The buying process is direct, but the decision should still be professional.

Step 1: Browse the available tracks

The first step is to browse the available tracks on Your Ghost Production.

A good buyer does not only search for the cheapest track or the first track that sounds polished. You should browse with your actual release plan in mind. Think about your artist name, genre direction, audience, label target, DJ sets, content style, and how the track would fit into your catalog.

A track can be strong and still be wrong for you.

For example, a festival-style record might sound huge, but if your project is built around darker club tracks, it may not fit. A vocal pop track might feel catchy, but if you are trying to build an underground techno profile, it could confuse the brand. A trap beat might sound expensive, but if you need a full vocal-ready song structure, you should listen carefully before buying.

Browsing should be intentional.

Look for tracks that match:

your genre direction

your artist identity

your release schedule

your live set needs

your label or distributor plan

your vocal or instrumental preference

your budget

your commercial usage needs

Your Ghost Production is a marketplace where buyers can purchase ready-to-release tracks, and approved producers can upload tracks, submit them for review, and sell them through the platform.

That marketplace setup gives buyers access to finished music, but it is still the buyer’s job to choose carefully.

Step 2: Preview the track before buying

Before buying, listen to the public preview.

On Your Ghost Production, public playback is a watermarked preview only, and it only plays while the track is available, not sold.

The preview exists so you can judge the track before purchase without exposing the final delivered files publicly. This is important for both sides. Buyers need to hear the music, and producers need protection against unwatermarked public downloads.

When previewing, do not only listen for whether the track is “good.” Listen for whether it works for your actual use.

Ask yourself:

Does the track fit my artist project?

Does the arrangement feel release-ready?

Does the energy match my audience?

Would I be comfortable putting my name on this?

Does the mix direction fit the genre?

Does the vocal, if there is one, suit my brand?

Can I imagine artwork, content, and a release campaign around it?

Would this track make sense next to my other releases?

A preview is not background listening. Treat it like A&R work.

If you are buying for a DJ project, imagine the track inside a set. If you are buying for a vocal project, think about whether the vocal or instrumental supports your identity. If you are buying for a label, think about whether the track fits your catalog. If you are buying for a new artist name, think about whether this is a strong first impression.

Step 3: Check whether the track is still available

Track availability matters.

If a track is available, you can consider buying it. If a track is sold, it is no longer available for purchase in the exclusive-style sale flow.

For exclusive-style tracks on Your Ghost Production, once sold, the track becomes sold and is no longer purchasable. Public preview playback is also disabled on sold tracks.

This protects buyers who purchase an exclusive-style listing. It also prevents other users from continuing to preview or buy a sold track through the public marketplace flow.

Before adding a track to your cart, make sure it is actually available. If you saw a track earlier and return later, check its status again. Good tracks can sell. A track that is available today may not be available later.

That is not a reason to panic-buy. It is a reason to make decisions seriously. If a track truly fits your project, understand the rights and terms, then act before someone else buys it. If you are unsure, do not buy only because you are afraid it may disappear.

Step 4: Read the track information carefully

The track page should help you understand what you are buying.

Do not treat the track title and preview as the only information that matters. A serious buyer should read the listing information before checkout.

Depending on the listing, useful information may include the genre, BPM, key, vocal type, rights badge, description, price, included deliverables, and any relevant track-specific details.

You should especially pay attention to anything that affects your intended use. If you plan to release the track commercially, the rights badge and purchase terms matter. If you plan to edit the track, the included files matter. If the track contains vocals, the vocal type and source information matter. If AI is involved, the disclosure matters.

Your Ghost Production’s control context makes one point very clear: not all track information is guaranteed to be 100 percent accurate. 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 is not a weakness. It is a realistic buyer standard.

A professional buyer should check details before purchase and ask support if something looks wrong or unclear.

Step 5: Review the rights badge

Before buying any ghost produced track, review the rights badge.

On Your Ghost Production, the site shows a rights badge per track. Examples include “Royalty-free / commercial-use track” and “Non-exclusive beat.” The practical intent in the current setup is that buyers can release and use the track commercially under their own brand or artist identity, per the purchase terms shown or linked on the site, including Customer Agreement, Terms, or FAQ at the time of purchase.

This is one of the most important parts of the buying process.

Do not assume every track has the same rights. Do not assume “ghost production” automatically means full copyright ownership. Do not assume “royalty-free” means copyright-free. Do not assume a non-exclusive beat gives the same control as an exclusive-style track.

The rights badge helps you understand the type of purchase. The purchase terms explain what applies.

Before checkout, ask:

Can I release this under my artist name?

Can I use it commercially?

Is it exclusive or non-exclusive?

Are there any restrictions?

Can I use it on streaming platforms?

Can I use it in DJ sets or live performances?

Can I modify it?

Can I monetize it?

Can I pitch it to a label?

Are vocals covered under the same terms?

Do the Customer Agreement, Terms, or FAQ answer my intended use?

This is especially important if you are planning a serious release, label pitch, paid campaign, sync use, or brand project.

Step 6: Check what files you will receive

A ghost produced track is not only the final audio you hear in the preview. The file package matters.

On Your Ghost Production, buyers receive a downloadable ZIP pack containing the delivered files for that track. What is included depends on what deliverables exist for that specific track. For standard non-legacy tracks, the package typically includes mastered WAV, unmastered WAV, stems ZIP, and MIDI ZIP. Vocal tracks also include instrumental mastered and unmastered WAVs.

This is useful because different files support different needs.

A mastered WAV is usually the finished master version.

An unmastered WAV can be useful if you want to send the track to your own mastering engineer or make final mastering adjustments.

Stems can help with edits, live versions, mix changes, arrangement changes, content versions, or vocal adjustments.

MIDI can help if you want to change melodies, chords, basslines, or musical elements where included.

Instrumental versions are especially useful for vocal tracks, live performance versions, radio edits, content edits, or future alternate versions.

Still, buyers should not assume every track includes every possible file type. The exact package depends on the delivered files for that specific track. You also should not assume project files are included unless the listing or terms clearly confirm that.

Step 7: Pay attention to vocals

If the track contains vocals, check the vocal information carefully.

Vocals can make a track more valuable and more release-ready, but they also create more rights questions. A vocal may be original, royalty-free, sample-pack based, AI-generated under allowed conditions, or created by a vocalist. Each source type has different implications.

Your Ghost Production’s rules require vocal tracks to follow specific disclosure paths. For original vocals, producers must declare the vocal source type and provide vocalist or source details as required. For royalty-free or sample-pack vocals, if no vocalist source is provided, the producer must provide the sample pack name and URL through provenance links. Vocal impersonation and voice-cloning of real artists are not allowed, and all rights and permissions must be in place before submission.

As a buyer, you should care about this because vocals are often the most recognizable part of a record.

If the vocal sounds like a famous artist, be cautious. If the vocal source is unclear, ask. If the track uses AI vocals, check the disclosure and terms. If the track uses royalty-free vocals, understand that royalty-free does not always mean unique to one track unless the terms say so.

A strong vocal is only useful if it can be used safely under the purchase terms.

Step 8: Understand the AI policy before buying

AI is now part of music buying, but it needs careful handling.

YGP’s current rules ban fully AI-generated tracks and AI-generated music parts or stems. The only AI-related exception allowed is AI vocals, under strict conditions and disclosure. AI usage disclosure is required. If AI is used, the AI service name is required. AI-cloned vocals of real artists are not allowed. AI vocals are allowed only if compliant. The submission flow requires confirming restricted AI vocal services were not used, and Udio vocals are disallowed in policy.

This means YGP should not be described as a platform where anything AI-generated is allowed. It also should not be described as a platform where every AI-related use is banned.

The correct buyer understanding is more specific:

fully AI-generated tracks are not allowed

AI-generated music parts 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

For buyers, this matters because distributors, labels, platforms, and audiences may treat AI-related music differently. If AI vocals are present, make sure you understand what is disclosed and whether it fits your release plan.

Step 9: Add the track to your cart

Once you have previewed the track, checked the rights badge, reviewed the file package, looked at vocal or AI information where relevant, and decided the track fits your project, you can add it to your cart.

This is the point where the process becomes straightforward.

Adding a track to cart means you are preparing to buy that listing. Before moving to checkout, make sure you are not rushing past the important details.

A good final check is:

I like the track.

It fits my artist or buyer project.

The rights badge matches my intended use.

The purchase terms do not conflict with my plan.

I understand whether the track is exclusive-style, royalty-free, commercial-use, or non-exclusive based on the listing.

I understand what files are included.

I have checked vocals and AI disclosures where relevant.

I am ready to download and back up the files after purchase.

If all of that is clear, proceed to checkout.

Step 10: Complete checkout through Stripe

The verified buying flow for YGP is simple: browse a track, add it to cart, complete checkout through Stripe, then download it from your account purchases after payment is confirmed.

Stripe is the checkout/payment processor used in the current verified flow.

During checkout, make sure your account and payment information are correct. A purchase is tied to account access and payment confirmation, so use the account where you want the purchased files to appear.

After successful payment confirmation, the track should be available from your account purchases.

If payment fails, is interrupted, or does not confirm correctly, do not assume the order is complete. Check your account, email, payment status, and support options if needed.

Step 11: Download the track from account purchases

After payment is confirmed, download the purchased track package from your account purchases.

This is where you receive the ZIP pack containing the delivered files for that track. Again, the exact files depend on the deliverables that exist for the specific listing.

Download the package as soon as possible and store it safely. Keep a backup in more than one place if the track is important to your release plan. For example, you may want one copy on your main computer and one copy in cloud storage or an external drive.

YGP does not currently use a fixed “X days” download-expiry rule in the app logic. Downloads stay available as long as the order is paid, not refunded, there is no active refund request pausing downloads, and the track remains in the expected sold state for delivery. Best practice is to download and back up immediately.

That best practice matters. Do not wait until release week to download the files. Download immediately, check the ZIP, confirm the files open, and keep your own backup.

Step 12: Check the downloaded files

After downloading, open the ZIP and check the files.

Do not wait until the night before distribution upload to discover something is missing, corrupted, or not what you expected.

Check:

Does the ZIP open correctly?

Is the mastered WAV present if expected?

Is the unmastered WAV present if expected?

Are stems included if expected?

Is MIDI included if expected?

Are instrumental versions included for vocal tracks where expected?

Do file names make sense?

Does the audio match the purchased track?

Do the files play correctly?

If something looks wrong, contact support. Keep your order reference, track title, and any relevant screenshots or file details ready.

This is part of professional release preparation. A buyer who checks early has time to solve problems before a release deadline.

Step 13: Prepare your release properly

Buying the track is not the same as releasing it.

After purchase, you still need to handle the release process. That may include artist naming, title confirmation, artwork, metadata, distributor upload, label pitch, release date planning, credits, publishing decisions, social content, DJ support, press materials, and promotion.

A purchased ghost produced track gives you the music asset. It does not automatically handle the rest.

If you are releasing through a distributor, make sure your metadata is accurate. If the track contains vocals, be careful with credits and source information. If you are pitching to a label, keep proof of purchase and rights terms available. If you are making edits, use the delivered files carefully and keep organized versions.

A strong track can be wasted by a sloppy release. A clean release plan protects the value of the music you bought.

Can I buy a track and release it immediately?

You may be able to release quickly if the purchase terms allow your intended use, the files are complete, and your distribution plan is ready.

But “immediately” should not mean careless.

Before release, check the rights badge, purchase terms, file package, metadata, vocal information, AI disclosures, and any distributor requirements. If you need edits, mastering changes, artwork, or label approval, handle those first.

A ready-to-release track can save a lot of time, but buyers still need to prepare the release professionally.

Can I buy a track that is already sold?

For exclusive-style tracks on YGP, no. Once sold, the track becomes sold and is no longer purchasable. Public preview playback is also disabled on sold tracks.

That is why availability matters when browsing.

If a track is available, you can consider buying it. If it is sold, move on to other available tracks. Do not assume support can simply resell a sold exclusive-style track. Sold status exists to protect the buyer who purchased it.

What if I have a problem after purchase?

If something does not look right after purchase, contact support with clear information.

Useful details include:

track title

order reference

account email

payment status

screenshot of the issue

description of the missing or broken file

whether the ZIP downloads correctly

whether the problem is with playback, files, rights information, or account access

The more specific you are, the easier it is to investigate.

If the issue is related to track information, remember that 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.

Common mistakes buyers should avoid

The first mistake is buying only because the track sounds good. It also needs to fit your artist identity and release plan.

The second mistake is ignoring the rights badge. The rights badge tells you what kind of usage framework applies to that track.

The third mistake is assuming full copyright ownership. Do not assume that unless the applicable agreement explicitly confirms it.

The fourth mistake is ignoring vocals. Vocal rights can be more complicated than instrumental rights.

The fifth mistake is ignoring AI disclosures. AI-related material can affect distributor, label, and platform decisions.

The sixth mistake is waiting too long to download and back up the files. Download immediately after payment confirmation.

The seventh mistake is assuming every track includes the same deliverables. Check the specific listing and package.

The eighth mistake is buying a track without a release plan. A great track still needs branding, artwork, metadata, distribution, and promotion.

The simple answer

To buy a ghost produced track on Your Ghost Production, browse the available catalog, preview the track while it is available, check the listing details and rights badge, add the track to your cart, complete checkout through Stripe, and download the purchased ZIP package from your account purchases after payment is confirmed.

The process is simple, but the decision should be careful.

A ghost produced track can become part of your public artist identity. Treat the purchase like a professional music decision. Listen properly. Check the rights. Review the deliverables. Pay attention to vocals and AI disclosures. Make sure the track fits your project. Download and back up the files immediately after purchase.

That is the cleanest way to buy a ghost produced track and prepare it for serious use.

FAQ
How can I buy a ghost produced track on Your Ghost Production?

Browse an available track, preview it, add it to your cart, complete checkout through Stripe, and download the purchased track from your account purchases after payment is confirmed.

Can I listen before buying?

Yes. Public playback is available as a watermarked preview while the track is available. Preview playback is disabled when a track is sold.

What happens after I pay?

After payment is confirmed, the purchased track package becomes available from your account purchases. You can download the ZIP containing the delivered files for that specific track.

What files do I receive after buying?

You receive a downloadable ZIP pack containing the delivered files for that track. 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.

Can I release the track under my own artist name?

The practical intent in the current YGP 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 the time of purchase.

Does buying mean I get full copyright ownership?

Do not assume full copyright ownership unless the applicable agreement clearly says so. Follow the track-specific rights badge, purchase terms, Customer Agreement, Terms, and FAQ.

Can I buy a sold track?

For exclusive-style tracks, once sold, the track becomes sold and is no longer purchasable. Public preview playback is also disabled on sold tracks.

How long can I download my purchased track?

YGP does not currently use a fixed “X days” download-expiry rule in the app logic. Downloads stay available as long as the order is paid, not refunded, not paused by an active refund request, and the track remains in the expected sold state for delivery. Best practice is to download and back up immediately.

What should I check before buying?

Check the preview, rights badge, purchase terms, track status, vocal type, AI disclosures, included files, genre, BPM, key, and whether the track fits your release plan.

What if something is wrong with my purchase?

Contact support with the track title, order reference, account details, screenshots, and a clear explanation of the issue.

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