WeTransfer vs a band workspace for stems and mixes
Expiring links, re-uploads after every revision, and no feedback loop - why one-shot file transfers fail ongoing music projects, and what to use instead.
By BandVolt
The short answer: WeTransfer is built for handing a file to a stranger once - links expire, nothing is versioned, and the conversation about the file happens somewhere else. A band workspace keeps stems and mixes on the song itself, permanently, at full quality, with the feedback attached. BandVolt does this on the free tier; on Premium you can invite your mix engineer straight into the song.
The stems are bounced, the deadline is tonight, and the ritual begins: zip the folder, upload four gigabytes, email the link, message the engineer to check their spam folder.
WeTransfer is genuinely good at what it does - moving a big file from A to B, once. The problem is that a mix is not a one-off delivery. It is a loop: stems out, mix back, notes, revision, notes, revision. A one-shot transfer tool fails at every turn of that loop.
The link is gone when you need it
Standard transfers expire after a few days. Three weeks later the engineer needs to re-check a stem, or the band wants mix two back to compare against mix four - and the link is dead. Someone re-bounces, re-zips, re-uploads.
In a band workspace nothing expires. Stems live on the song they belong to; every mix that comes back is a labelled, dated version in the song’s history. The file from three weeks ago is exactly where it was three weeks ago.
Every revision is a fresh upload into the void
With transfers, version control is a filename convention and an email thread. Anthem_stems_v2_FIXED.zip - is that before or after the bass re-track? Which link in the thread is current? Nobody is sure, and the wrong stems get mixed more often than anyone admits.
Versions in a workspace are chronological by construction. The newest is on top, the history is intact, and Quick Compare plays any two side by side at the same position so “did the revision help?” is answered by listening, not by archaeology.
The feedback lives in a different app
A transfer moves audio; the notes about the audio go by email, chat, or a voice memo. The loop’s most valuable part - “vocal up 1 dB after the second chorus” - is separated from the file it describes the moment it is sent.
On BandVolt the notes are pinned to the exact second of the exact version. On Premium, you can skip the sending entirely: invite the mix engineer as an external collaborator on the song and they see the stems, the versions, and the comments - and nothing else in your band’s workspace. Revoke access when the job is done.
When a transfer is still the right tool
Delivering final masters to a duplication plant, sending a one-off file to someone you will never work with again - a transfer service is perfect. It is the ongoing collaborations that deserve better than a chain of expiring links.
Put your stems where the work happens - free on the Basic tier, no credit card required.