Musiversal co-founders André Miranda (left) and Xavier Jameson. Photo Credit: Musiversal
Lisbon-headquartered Musiversal disclosed the raise and the buildout ambitions in a formal release that was emailed to DMN. Founded in 2018 and billing itself as “the world’s first truly global recording studio,” the platform boasts a “handpicked roster of world-class talent,” according to its website.
Per the same source, artist clients can schedule livestream collaborations with these “rigorously auditioned” professionals and then receive “pro-level stems,” retaining “100% ownership of the music they create” as well.
Returning to the funding itself, Musiversal didn’t identify its backers in the release. And when asked for details, a rep only highlighted the company’s plans for the newly obtained capital – more on this in a moment.
Musiversal is said to have north of 1,000 members in the U.S. and to book an average of over 300 sessions daily, with in excess of $3 million in payouts to roster musicians thus far. The latter provide various instrumentals, vocals, production, mixing, mastering, and (while perhaps technically outside the music space) even marketing services, the site shows.
“Music makers should be able to pursue every idea they have with the same power, quality, and access that used to be reserved for major-label artists,” elaborated co-founder and CEO André Miranda. “That’s the promise of No Limits.”
“In a world where creation is cheap and content is infinite,” added co-founder and chief growth officer Xavier Jameson, “musical success will come from judgment, taste, curation – and the ability to build meaningful human relationships.”
Additionally, the membership-based platform has been hosting in-person workshops and networking outings in LA, the rep said.
Now, Musiversal is evidently looking to take those happenings to the next level with “its first-ever LA soirée,” dubbed No Limits Live and teed up for October 25th. Among other things, the event will feature live recording sessions and showcase performances, the business relayed.
To this point in 2025, a significant portion of music industry funding has reached AI, live/ticketing, and catalog players. But last year brought several multimillion-dollar rounds for collaboration startups including Ampollo, Highnote, Submix, and Bridge.audio.