I built an app to share the songs that say what you can’t.
Last month I decided to build an app…before knowing so much as where to start.
I’m not in the tech realm at all. I’m a mortgage underwriter. I’m almost 40. I barely passed intro to python 20 years ago. But I did it. I built an app called Musaic. It's part music journal part community sharing. You log a song, you tag it with what you felt — Aching, Hopeful, Bittersweet, Restless, Haunted, Tender, whatever lands — and if you want, you write a story about why. By default, posts are public but can be made private.
—The power of the app is the community of stories, songs, and feelings. Imagine listening while reading other people’s stories about your most meaningful songs. The songs that helped shape who you are. There’s beauty in that. Now imagine feeling hopeful, and browsing a playlists made of stories shared by other users. It brings a new weight to the songs, right?
— I didn't build it for money. I didn't build it for the data. I built it because it felt like it needed to exist and nobody else was making it.
—Spotify counts plays. Apple Music remembers what I skipped. Last.fm scrobbles. None of them know anything about me. They know my behavior. There's a difference, and I wanted somewhere the difference mattered.
Musaic felt like it should exist alongside the streamers. Songs come from Apple Music. Subscribers can play the full track, non-subscribers get the 30-second preview. Spotify is on the list — everything starts somewhere, and I'm still not sure I know how I got this version built.
A few things I learned shipping this:
— The hardest part wasn't the code. It was deleting the gamification. Every default in modern app UX wants you to add a streak counter, a leaderboard, a "you're on a roll" notification. I had to keep removing them. The app doesn't reward you for showing up. It just remembers what you said when you did.
— You can log the same song twice in a year because you felt something different about it. The app likes you for that. There's no "duplicate" warning. Songs change shape while we do the same.
— I built it as a tool to better understand myself. The thing I keep finding out is that I notice patterns I didn't know I had — what I reach for when I'm restless versus when I'm wistful, which artists show up in grief and which ones never do. That alone has been worth the build.
— I'm sharing it here because I think other people might find it useful. Not as a marketing pitch. Just in case the description above sounded like something you've been trying to find.
musical-mosaic.app — App Store link is on the site. iOS only right now. Android and Spotify are on the list.
Honest feedback welcome. Especially the painful kind.
Thanks
-J