Halalify Music is an AI-assisted educational tool that summarizes documented Islamic scholarly positions on music. This page explains exactly how that works: which primary sources the analysis rests on, what role AI plays, how verdicts are scored, and what Halalify cannot and does not do.
Who Is Behind Halalify
Halalify Music is built and maintained by the Halalify Editorial Team — a small team with a background in Islamic jurisprudential research, focused specifically on the music permissibility question across all six major frameworks. We are not a religious authority. We do not issue fatwas. We compile, verify, and present what qualified scholars have already ruled, so that users can apply the position of the school they personally follow.
Our editorial process involves: (1) identifying the authoritative primary sources for each school, (2) extracting the operative rulings and the criteria they depend on, (3) encoding those criteria as the basis for per-song analysis, and (4) reviewing the resulting verdicts against the source texts to check for drift or misrepresentation. Content is updated when primary sources are updated (for example, new Q&A entries on sistani.org or leader.ir) or when a genuine error is identified.
Schools of Thought We Cover
Halalify analyzes songs against six documented jurisprudential frameworks. Each has its own operative criterion:
Every verdict is grounded in named, primary-source jurisprudence. The following texts form the core of our source library:
Ayatollah Sistani — A Code of Practice for Muslims in the West, Book 46, pp. 257–268, covering the general rules on music (§2071) and the Q&A entries (§2072). Q&A numbers 01200, 01246, and 01263 are the specific official entries on ghina, religious songs, and musical instruments. All are available in verified English translation at sistani.org.
Ayatollah Khamenei — His published rulings on ghina and music from leader.ir (Q&A 1121–1153), and his 76-session jurisprudence course on ghina wa musiqi (four-part Persian text, summarized and cited in our source documents).
Ibn Qudamah — al-Mughni, specifically Kitab al-Shahadat (rulings 6–11), which provides the most systematic classical Hanbali treatment of music in any school's canonical reference text.
Hanafi sources — Al-Marghinani, al-Hidayah; Ibn Humam, Fath al-Qadir 6/36; Ibn Abidin, Radd al-Muhtar 6/348–350.
Maliki sources — Al-Qurtubi, al-Jami li Ahkam al-Quran 14/51–56; Ibn al-Arabi, Ahkam al-Quran 3/1494; Ibn Rushd, Bidayat al-Mujtahid.
Shafi'i sources — Al-Nawawi, Minhaj al-Talibin; Ibn Hajar al-Haytami, Kaff al-Ra'a 2/270; Ahmad ibn Naqib al-Misri, Reliance of the Traveller r40.2; Al-Ghazali, Ihya' 'Ulum al-Din 2/272–302.
Cross-school sources — Ibn Hazm, al-Muhalla; Al-Shawkani, Nayl al-Awtar 8/104–105 and his treatise Ibtal Da'wa al-Ijma' 'ala Tahreem Mutlaq al-Sama'.
How the AI Analysis Works
Halalify uses a large language model (Google Gemini) as the analytical engine. The AI is given the full text of each school's operative ruling criteria — drawn from the primary sources listed above — together with the song's title, artist, and lyrics, and is instructed to apply each criterion to the specific track. It returns a per-school verdict on a 1–5 scale and the chain of reasoning that produced it.
What the AI does well: it can apply explicit jurisprudential criteria to song content systematically across all six schools in a single pass. For songs with clearly haram content (explicit sexual lyrics, promotion of alcohol, blasphemy) or clearly permitted content (religious poetry without entertainment-style instrumentation), the analysis is reliable and consistent.
Where to apply caution: the AI cannot make the expert-recognition judgment that some frameworks require — for example, Sistani's test asks whether "a person familiar with music" would recognize the tune as belonging to the entertainment-gathering type. The AI approximates this judgment but cannot substitute for a human with genuine musical and cultural expertise. Songs that score 3 (Caution) on any school's framework should be treated as genuinely ambiguous and referred to a qualified scholar.
The AI does not access streaming audio. It analyzes lyrical content and musical description, not the acoustic signal of the recording itself. For instrumental or mostly-instrumental tracks, or tracks where the tune's character is the key question, the analysis is necessarily less certain.
What Our Confidence Levels Mean
Halalify verdicts carry an implicit confidence level based on how clearly the song's characteristics fall within the documented criteria:
Score 5 (Clearly Halal) or 1 (Clearly Haram): High confidence. The song has clear features — explicit forbidden content, or clearly non-entertainment-style content within halal parameters — that map unambiguously to the school's criteria.
Score 4 (Likely Halal) or 2 (Likely Haram): Medium-high confidence. The dominant features of the song align with the school's test, with minor considerations in the other direction.
Score 3 (Caution): Genuine ambiguity. The analysis found features pointing in both directions under the same school's criteria, or the school's criteria themselves require an expert cultural judgment that an automated system cannot reliably make. Consult a qualified scholar.
Verdicts that rest on clearly stated criteria (e.g., Sistani's entertainment-gatherings test applied to a song with obviously party-style music) carry higher confidence than verdicts that require nuanced contextual inference (e.g., applying the Maliki spectrum to a borderline song).
What Halalify Does Not Do
Being clear about what Halalify is not is as important as explaining what it is:
Not a fatwa service. No verdict on Halalify constitutes a religious ruling binding on any individual. A fatwa requires a qualified mufti or marjaʼ who can account for your personal circumstances, your school, and your local scholarly tradition. Halalify cannot do this.
Not a personal ruling for you. The verdict on a song is based on the song's general characteristics. Individual circumstances — your intention, your spiritual state, your context of listening — can affect the ruling for a specific person under most schools' frameworks.
Not a ruling on performances, live events, or production. Halalify analyzes recorded tracks. The permissibility of playing an instrument in a specific context, attending a concert, or producing music professionally are distinct questions requiring separate analysis.
Not a complete scholarly opinion. Our editorial team compiles and verifies documented positions. We are not Islamic scholars. Any analysis Halalify produces should be understood as an AI-assisted educational summary, reviewed for accuracy against primary texts, not as the output of qualified Islamic scholarship.
Limitations of Our Source Compilation
We are transparent about the limits of our source work:
Secondary references. Some citations — particularly for the Maliki and Shafi'i schools — come through secondary English-language scholarship. We have cited those sources accurately, but we have not independently verified every Arabic text against the original manuscripts.
Claimed consensus. Claims of scholarly consensus (ijmaʼ) on music are themselves historically contested. Al-Shawkani's treatise directly challenges the claim that all four Sunni madhabs agreed on categorical prohibition. We present these disputes accurately rather than asserting a consensus that does not exist.
Evolving positions. Khamenei's leader.ir Q&A is updated periodically. Sistani's official translations are occasionally revised. We update our source documents when we become aware of changes.
Lyric availability. If lyrics are unavailable for a specific track, the analysis is based on available information (title, artist, genre, musical description). Verdicts are less reliable for unavailable lyrics and carry implicit lower confidence.
Corrections and Contact
If you believe a ruling has been misattributed, a source misquoted, or an analysis clearly wrong, we want to fix it. Email support@halalify.app with the page URL, the specific claim, and the correcting source reference. We review every reported error against the primary sources cited and update the content where warranted. Corrections are reflected in the page's dateModified field in the structured data.
Check a specific song
Halalify analyzes any song against each of these schools and returns a per-school verdict with the reasoning behind it.
No. Halalify is an AI-assisted educational tool that summarizes documented Islamic scholarly positions on music. It is not a fatwa service and does not issue personal religious rulings. A fatwa requires a qualified mufti or marjaʼ who can account for your personal circumstances, your tradition, and your local scholarly context. Halalify cannot do this. For a personal ruling on a specific song or question, consult a qualified Islamic scholar of your chosen school or tradition. Treat Halalify as a starting point for informed reflection — a way to understand what the major schools document — not as the final word on your own practice.
Who reviews the content on Halalify?
Content is compiled and reviewed by the Halalify Editorial Team against the primary source texts cited on each page — primarily Sistani's Code of Practice (verified against sistani.org), Khamenei's leader.ir Q&A (verified against the official site), Ibn Qudamah's al-Mughni, and the four-madhab framework documentation. AI-generated analyses are reviewed for structural accuracy against those criteria before publication. We are not Islamic scholars; we are a research team that works from documented primary-source positions.
How accurate are the verdicts?
Verdicts for songs with clearly characterized content are reliable and consistent. Songs that score 5 (Clearly Halal) or 1 (Clearly Haram) under a given school's framework are cases where the primary criteria map unambiguously to the track's features. Songs that score 3 (Caution) reflect genuine ambiguity — either in the song's characteristics, in the school's criteria as applied to the specific case, or in both. Halalify presents scholarly diversity rather than a single 'correct' answer. Where the four Sunni madhabs differ (and they do — significantly on the Maliki spectrum), we present all four positions.
What role does AI play in the analysis?
Halalify uses Google Gemini as the analytical engine. The AI is given the primary-source criteria for each school and the song's lyrics and metadata, then instructed to apply each school's test. This works reliably for songs with clearly forbidden or clearly permitted content. It works less reliably for songs where the school's test requires cultural expert-recognition — such as Sistani's entertainment-gatherings test, which asks whether a musically knowledgeable person would recognize the tune as entertainment-party music. Songs in that borderline territory score 3 (Caution) and should be referred to a human scholar.
How do I report an error?
Email support@halalify.app with the page URL, the specific claim you believe is wrong, and the primary source reference that corrects it. We review every reported error against the sources cited and update the content where warranted. Corrections are reflected in the dateModified field in the page's structured data, and the corrected version is published without delay.
Halalify Music is an educational tool, not a fatwa service. It summarizes documented scholarly positions and is not a substitute for consulting a qualified Islamic scholar for a personal ruling.