Learn

About Yummagumma

A short Q&A about what Yummagumma is, why artists release here, why fans collect here, how streaming and lossless Vault playback work, and what makes editions different from a download or a stream.

The big picture

What is Yummagumma?

Yummagumma is a music platform where artists release their work as limited, collectible editions. Fans stream releases in the web app and unlock lossless playback of the originals through the companion Vault app on phone or hi-fi hardware. Editions can also include Deep Cuts — collectible bonus content tied to your copy. Every edition is yours to keep, and yours to resell.

Do I really pay more than a streaming subscription?

In practice, no. A streaming subscription splits your monthly fee across every artist you barely listen to — the people you actually love get a tiny fraction of it. On Yummagumma you only pay when you decide to own a release. After that you can listen to it as much as you want, forever, with no recurring fee. If you stream ten albums on repeat all year, the math works strongly in your favour.

Can I still discover music without paying?

Yes. Browsing the marketplace, searching by artist, track, label or genre, and previewing releases is free — no subscription, no account required. Without an account each track plays as a 30-second preview that gently fades out and crossfades into the next track, with a friendly nudge to create an account for full playback. Discovery is for everyone; ownership is opt-in.

How is it different from regular streaming services?

Streaming services rent you access to a catalogue and slice your subscription across the whole industry. Yummagumma sells you real copies of releases that live in your collection forever. You stream what you own, you can play it losslessly through the Vault, and you can sell or transfer it like any other collectible.

How is it different from buying an MP3 or a record?

Each edition is a numbered, limited copy with verifiable provenance, and it can carry Deep Cuts that don’t exist anywhere else. Artists choose how many copies exist. Fans get a real asset — not a download you might lose, and not a license that can be revoked.

For artists

Why should an artist release on Yummagumma?

You set the price, the supply, and the format. You upload your WAV masters directly. You keep ownership of your catalogue through a permanent Soundmark release record, and you collect a defined royalty on every secondary sale — forever.

What does a release look like technically?

You upload lossless WAVs, cover art, and optional gatefold or back cover. The platform encodes a high-quality streaming version, and packages your masters into an encrypted lossless archive. Both go on public, content-addressed storage (IPFS via Filebase) — the files stay reachable, the keys stay yours.

What about Deep Cuts and physical media?

Deep Cuts are bonus content tied to an edition: alternate takes, videos, liner notes, hidden surprises. Editions can also opt into physical pressings (vinyl, etc.) once a release hits its threshold. Provenance of the physical item is tied to the collected edition.

How fair is the revenue model?

Artists keep the majority of the primary sale, and the master holder earns a royalty on every secondary sale — forever. Exact shares are configurable per release and may evolve, but the principle is fixed: the people making the music get the meaningful cut, and the platform takes a small operating fee. Royalties are recorded alongside ownership, so fans can verify them.

For fans

Why should a fan buy editions instead of just streaming?

Because you actually own the music. Your editions live in your collection, you can play them through the Vault in lossless quality, and they hold collectible value — many releases are strictly limited. If you stop using Yummagumma, you keep what you bought.

Are editions resellable?

Yes. Editions are designed to be transferable. When secondary trading opens, the original artist still earns a royalty on every resale, so supporting an artist on day one keeps paying off as the collection appreciates.

What do I actually get when I buy?

A numbered Soundmark edition, streaming access in the web app, lossless playback through the Vault, any Deep Cuts attached to your edition, and — if a physical campaign is active — an opt-in for the pressed object with a printed delivery ID linked to your edition.

Streaming, lossless and gapless playback

How does streaming work?

The web app streams a high-quality encoded version of each track. Audio is delivered in encrypted chunks straight from the public IPFS gateway, decrypted in your browser by a Service Worker, and played back through a normal <audio> element. Nothing is proxied through our servers — it is fast, cheap, and content-addressed.

What can I listen to without an account?

Anyone can play a 30-second preview of any track in the marketplace. Previews fade out gently and crossfade into the next track so browsing feels musical, not abrupt. A small prompt invites you to create a free account whenever you want to hear a full track.

What changes once I have a Yummagumma account?

With an account you can stream full tracks for free. Releases you already own play without limits. For releases you don’t own yet, after a handful of completed listens in a rolling 7-day window we’ll gently surface a message along the lines of “hey, you seem to really like this track — consider buying it.” Only plays that run all the way to the end of the track count toward the cap; skipping mid-song or sampling the first 30 seconds is always free. It’s a nudge, not a paywall: discovery stays generous, and ownership stays meaningful.

Why gate repeat listens at all?

Because unlimited free streams of the same track turn the platform back into a streaming service — which is exactly what we’re trying not to be. The soft cap on repeats keeps casual discovery free for everyone while making sure the artists you love actually get paid when a track becomes part of your life.

What is the Vault?

The Vault is the companion app for lossless playback of editions you own. It verifies your Soundmark edition, downloads the encrypted release archive (your WAVs), and decrypts on-device. The Vault is built for hi-fi: chunked AES-256-GCM decryption, drag-to-seek with a smooth playhead, and bit-perfect output to your DAC.

Why is gapless playback perfect in the Vault?

Because the Vault plays the original master files — not a re-encoded streaming version. Album sides that were mixed to flow seamlessly (live records, DJ mixes, concept albums) play the way the artist intended: zero silence between tracks, sample- accurate transitions, no codec padding. Nothing else in your listening chain matches the master.

Do I need special hardware?

No. The Vault runs on phone and tablet. For audiophile setups it is being prepared for dedicated hardware (e.g. Cambridge Audio integrations) so the master can travel from your collection to your speakers without a re-encode along the way.

Trust, fairness and ownership

Why is this fair?

Artists set their own terms. Fans get something real. Royalties are transparent and recorded on the same chain that records ownership. Files live on public, content-addressed storage so nothing disappears if the platform pauses. Fans hold their own keys.

How does that compare to streaming economically?

On a subscription service, your monthly fee is pooled and split across every track played on the platform that month. The artist you listen to most gets a sliver. On Yummagumma, the money you spend on a release goes directly to that artist (and their label, if any), with a small platform fee — and it pays them again on every secondary sale. There is no middle pool diluting the payout.

What is the platform’s business model?

Yummagumma takes a small percentage of primary sales and a small percentage of secondary sales. That covers running the marketplace, the streaming infrastructure, encryption and key management, the Vault apps, and ongoing development. We do not sell a subscription, we do not run ads, and we do not monetise listening data. The platform earns when fans actually choose to own something.

Why is content-addressed storage important?

Encrypted streams and lossless archives are stored on IPFS, which addresses files by their content hash. That means anyone can host a copy and the address still resolves — the music is not locked behind one company’s servers. Combined with self-custody keys, your collection is robust to any one party going away.

What is a Soundmark?

Your Soundmark is your permanent music identity, auto-created on signup. It is the key to your collection — purchases, edition ownership, lossless unlocks, and (later) secondary sales all move through it. You can reveal and back up the recovery phrase at any time from your account page.

What if Yummagumma goes away?

Your editions stay in your Soundmark. Your encrypted archives stay on IPFS. Your Soundmark mnemonic still unwraps your keys. The collection is yours independent of the platform.

Soundmark technology and ownership

Why does Yummagumma use Flow blockchain for Soundmark technology?

Blockchains first became known through digital money, but the more useful idea here is digital ownership. Yummagumma uses Flow blockchain to anchor each Soundmark copy to a permanent ownership record. In simple terms, your edition is represented by an NFT on Flow. That matters because ownership can be verified independently of our app: who owns a copy, which release it belongs to, and whether it has been transferred or resold. That extra layer of trust is what makes Soundmark editions collectible, transferable, and able to carry ongoing artist royalties.

What about energy use and environmental impact?

This matters, and we try to be transparent about it. Flow uses a proof-of-stake design with specialized node roles, so it uses far less energy than older blockchains that rely on heavy competitive computation. That does not mean zero impact, but it is a more efficient and more sustainable base for a music platform like Yummagumma. In short: there is still an environmental footprint, but it is substantially lower than the compute-heavy blockchain model many people associate with NFTs.