Plan & Organize Loop
Hold each song's research and brainstorm, compare versions, classify by genre, and plan the next release.
Anyone turning study notes, generated takes, and rough ideas into an organized, intentional body of work.
This is the workspace where the whole pipeline lives and closes. Every song gets a home that holds more than the final audio: its Research document — the deep study the AI wrote out about the theme, from many angles — and its Brainstorm scratch page, where the divergent hooks, choruses, titles, and reusable source lines pile up before anything is chosen. Nothing good gets lost in a folder somewhere.
Alongside the thinking sits the doing: bring in the takes you generated, line every version up side by side, rate them, and mark the keeper. Then the encyclopedia earns its keep — classify each finished song against the genre trees so your catalog is organized the same way the whole world of music is.
Once a release is filed, you plan the next theme from what you've built — and that plan flows straight back into a Write loop, where the next song's research starts. The catalog feeding the next idea is what makes the entire pipeline itself a loop.
Skills & actions it uses
The concrete, reusable skills this loop calls to actually do the work.
The Song PlannerThe workspace that stores each song's research doc, brainstorm scratch page, version comparisons, ratings, and genre classification.
The loop
- 1
Capture the research
Keep the AI's study of the theme as a living Research document on the song — many angles, many pages if it earns them. This is the doorway every later choice walks through.
- 2
Keep the brainstorm
Hold the divergent ideas on a Brainstorm scratch page so nothing is lost before you converge.
- Many candidate hooks and many candidate choruses
- Title options, before settling on one
- Source lines worth using directly or lightly rewriting to be more musical
- The genre / sub-genre and artist-voice ideas you weighed
- 3
Import your takes
Bring the songs you generated into the workspace so every version of every song lives in one place.
- 4
File songs into projects
Sort each song into a named project so the catalog stays organized — group by genre, by theme, or by both, and create a new project when nothing fits.
- Group by what makes sense: a genre project (e.g. a hip-hop project) and/or a theme project (e.g. an 'Ethereal Hymns' project)
- A song can sit in more than one project; pick the home that helps you find it later
- If no project fits, make one — the project name is how you'll navigate the catalog as it grows
- 5
Compare and rate
Line up each version side by side, listen, and rate them so the best work rises to the top.
- 6
Mark the keeper
Choose the definitive take for each song and flag it as the one to release.
- 7
Classify by genre
Tag each finished song against the encyclopedia's genre trees so the catalog is organized and discoverable.
- 8
Plan the next release
Decide the next theme or album from what you've built — which hands off to a Write loop and starts the cycle again.
Then run it again for the next song, chapter, or track.
You end with
- A per-song Research document and Brainstorm scratch page kept with the song
- An organized, rated, genre-classified library with a keeper marked for each song
- A plan for the next song or album that feeds back into a Write loop
How it connects
Pairs with
Commonly run just before or after this one in the pipeline.