De La Soul Atmos work

AudioShake says Grammy‑winning engineer Rich Keller used their stem‑separation tech to produce about 80% of De La Soul’s first six albums’ Dolby Atmos mixes by rebuilding stems from the original stereo masters. (x.com)

AudioShake’s case study says the remaster effort required roughly a year‑and‑a‑half to “clean up cosmetic issues” and ready the decades‑old mixes for Dolby Atmos. (audioshake.ai)) The writeup names Reservoir Records as the label that partnered with mix engineer Rich Keller on the project. (audioshake.ai)) Dolby published a Creator Talks episode on January 9, 2025 that features Rich Keller discussing his work reimagining 3 Feet High and Rising in Dolby Atmos. (dolby.com)) Reporting notes that five early De La Soul albums — 3 Feet High and Rising (1989), De La Soul Is Dead (1991), Buhloone Mindstate (1993), Stakes Is High (1996) and AOI: Bionix (2001) — are available in Dolby Atmos on Apple Music. (soundandvision.com)) AudioShake states that when vintage multitrack masters were available members of De La Soul’s original team recreated those mixes, and the company’s AI‑generated stems were used for material lacking multitracks. (audioshake.ai)) AudioShake announced a $14 million Series A on October 1, 2025 and said it had signed more than 40 enterprise contracts while reporting 400% year‑over‑year revenue growth as it scaled the platform. (musicbusinessworldwide.com)) An AWS case study says AudioShake built scalable training and inference infrastructure on AWS and won the top prize at the 2024 AWS re:Invent Unicorn Tank, citing those capabilities as the technical backbone for projects such as catalog remasters. (aws.amazon.com))

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