GRAI, an AI music startup building remix-first social apps instead of text-to-song generators, came out of stealth on April 21, 2026 with $9 million in seed funding and two live consumer apps. The round is co-led by Khosla Ventures and Inovo VC, with participation from Tensor Ventures, Tiny.VC, Flyer One Ventures, and a16z Scout Fund.

What Happened

GRAI publicly introduced itself on April 21 via a TechCrunch profile that details the funding round and the thesis behind the company. The core argument from CEO Ilya Liasun: most people do not want to prompt a model to generate a song from scratch, they want to remix, restyle, and share tracks they already love with their friends. GRAI is building around that behavior.

Two products are already shipping. Music with Friends is live on iOS and lets users remix trending tracks with AI and send the results to friends as a social thread. A second app, Remix Playground, ships on Android and focuses on solo style experimentation, letting users change the genre, tempo, or mood of a song without writing prompts.

The company was founded by Ilya Liasun (CEO), Andrei Avsievich (President), and Dima Kamarouski (CTO). The team previously built VOCHI, an AI video creation app acquired by Pinterest. Angel investors in the round include Andrew Zhai (ex-Pinterest, co-founder Genova Labs), Greg Tkachenko (ex-Snap, founder Unreal Labs), Rob Reid (founder of Rhapsody), and Dima Shvets (Reface, MirAI).

Why It Matters

GRAI is a bet on a different shape of AI music than the one Suno and Udio popularized. Generation from scratch optimizes for producing new audio. Remix optimizes for participation around audio that already has cultural traction. The second one maps more cleanly onto how Gen Z and Gen Alpha actually discover music, which is through short-form content, friends, and fandoms, not through listening-to-a-prompt.

The positioning also sidesteps the thorniest part of AI music. Deezer recently disclosed that 44 percent of daily uploads are now fully AI-generated, triggering fraud detection and demonetization. A remix-first product that routes activity toward existing rights holders rather than flooding streaming catalogs with new AI tracks is a different pitch to artists, labels, and platforms, and GRAI is explicitly framing it as a way to create new royalty surfaces rather than compete with artists.

Key Details

  • Funding: $9 million seed, co-led by Khosla Ventures and Inovo VC
  • Other investors: Tensor Ventures, Tiny.VC, Flyer One Ventures, a16z Scout Fund, plus angels from Pinterest, Snap, Rhapsody, and Reface
  • Live products: Music with Friends (iOS), Remix Playground (Android)
  • Core feature: AI remix of existing tracks, not generation from text prompts
  • Target audience: Gen Z and Gen Alpha social music users
  • Founders: Ilya Liasun (CEO), Andrei Avsievich (President), Dima Kamarouski (CTO), previously VOCHI (acquired by Pinterest)
  • HQ: Belarus-origin team, now international

What to Do Next

Creators and indie artists curious about remix-as-distribution can install Music with Friends on iOS or Remix Playground on Android and test what the AI does to their own tracks before deciding whether to opt into future licensing layers. The product is consumer-first today, but the economics only work if labels and independent artists grant remix rights, so expect a developer or partnership pathway to follow.

For anyone tracking the AI music landscape alongside tools like Google Flow Music and the broader generation-first stack, GRAI is the clearest early example of a remix-and-share consumer product built on top of AI. Watch how quickly labels move from tolerating it to licensing it, which will determine whether remix-first becomes a real category or stays a novelty.