We all have it — a phone full of voice clips: half-finished song ideas, random thoughts scribbled in audio, laughter from a cousin’s birthday, the hum of a city street, or even a fleeting moment worth holding on to. But when every file shows up as “New Recording 1898,” those precious fragments become buried memories lost in the noise.
That’s exactly the problem the team behind Sound Library set out to solve. Born from frustration with the limitations of Apple Voice Memos — simple, useful, but chaotic once usage scales — Sound Library was built to transform that forgotten heap into a living, navigable audio diary.
In this episode, we’ll talk about:
* 😟 The universal pain: why traditional voice-memo apps fail when your library grows — and how losing track of recordings can feel like losing parts of your past.
* 🛠️ The solution: how Sound Library uses Collections (Recents, Albums, Sounds, chronological archives, Trash) to bring structure, order, and meaning back into your audio.
* 🎨 The magic of seeing sound: automatic categorization, visual waveforms with color-coded segments, searchable metadata — turning audio into something you can see, recall, and revisit.
* 🔍 The philosophy: this isn’t about making new sounds — it’s about reconnecting with the ones you’ve already created. Your memories, your voice, your ideas — rediscovered.
If you’ve ever found yourself saying, “I recorded that somewhere… but where?” — this episode is for you.
Because what’s worth saving deserves to be heard again.
This is a podcast version of this blog post: Rediscovering My Own Soundtrack
This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit soundlibrary.substack.com