How the score is set.
Four CHRP scores, four human-performance variables, four modes. One briefing memo for the room that books your music.
The fingerprint, then the mode.
CHRP listens for the emotional behavior of a song along two parallel axes. The first is the song’s signature — four CHRP scores: Focus, Balance, Motivation, and Calm. The second is the set of human-performance variables it supports — Focus, Recovery, Flow, and Rest. None of these are about genre. They are about what the song does to the body and attention of a listener.
We translate that fingerprint into one of four modes: Ready, Flow, Recharge, or Recover. Mode is shorthand for what the song is built to support — performance, sustained attention, restoration, or reflection. Inside each mode, the polygon shape gives the specific character of the song.
Why it matters for your music.
Brand directors, supervisors, and creative leads do not pitch each other with vibes. They pitch with comps, with mode, with the specific moment a song is built to score. The page they are looking for is the one that already speaks their language — the one that names the mode, gives the comp, suggests the moment, and leaves the creative call to them.
The CHRP report is that page. It is built to be the cleanest translation between an artist’s intuition and an operator’s brief. Your job is to make the music. Our job is to make sure the right room hears it the way you meant it to be heard.
What you get in a scan.
- Mode & EPI Score — exactly what kind of track you made.
- Pitch-readiness verdict — Pitch now, Develop, or Hold, with the reasoning.
- Dr. Rhodes’ analysis — where it lives commercially and what to avoid.
- Three placements written in the language supervisors use.
- A throughline you can paste into any pitch email today.
- Live market signal on where active brief demand sits right now.