Our Story

Our goal it so use artificial intelligence for good by developing deeply meaningful experiences that truly help people heal, grow, and thrive.

Meet the Team

We are building a team devoted to the mission of helping people live happier, healthier, more fulfilling lives. We share a vision of a world where mental wellness is supported through creativity and connection. We are Unsung Studios.


  • Founder

    Dr. Benjamin Good founded Unsung Studios to merge artificial intelligence with the science of music therapy and bring the benefits of creative expression to a broad audience. With more than 25 years of experience applying computer science to biomedical challenges, he has authored over 80 peer-reviewed publications in domains including machine learning, bioinformatics and citizen science. His vision for Unsung Studios is to use technology to serve human wellbeing by enabling new forms of creative expression.

This song is about overcoming workplace anxiety.  When I wrote it (with Flow’s help), I was thinking about my wife and her struggles.  Writing it helped me understand her a little deeper and sharing it with her helped us grow together.  

This song is about my daughter’s favorite stuffed animal and how I will treasure it long after she has left it behind.


  • Founding Scientific, Artistic, and Therapeutic Advisor

    Dr. Felicity Baker is a passionate pioneer in Therapeutic Songwriting, using her extensive expertise in clinical research and music therapy to create accessible methods that empower people to transform their stories into powerful songs. With over three decades of experience, she has developed innovative songwriting models focused on support and wellbeing. As the author of "Therapeutic Songwriting: Developments in Theory, Methods and Practice," she continues to shape the field. When she’s not leading clinical trials or influencing music therapy policy as a Professor of Music Therapy at the University of Melbourne, she’s busy composing a better world, one note at a time.

This is a song I wrote for my son Finn during his final year of secondary school. Finn has a passion for karate, so I used the analogies of the dojo to reflect his journey - staying focused, steady, and grounded as he pushes through to the finish line of year 12. 

Hamstrung emerged as a way to process my frustration and manage my response to a work situation that left me powerless and feeling unheard. The song captures the tension of striving to move forward while being held back by obstruction and inaction.