TL;DR
0ld Skool remix almost always refers to the 2018 Punjabi track 'Old Skool' by Sidhu Moose Wala featuring Prem Dhillon, and the wave of unofficial remixes that followed. The original was produced by The Kidd and released on the Brown Boys label. After Sidhu Moose Wala's death in 2022, the song became one of the most-streamed Punjabi tracks globally, and dozens of remixes — slowed, reverbed, drill, bass-boosted, mashups — circulated across YouTube, SoundCloud, and Spotify reuploads. None of these are tied to skool.com, the community platform. Skool.com is a SaaS product for hosting paid coaching communities, founded by Sam Ovens in 2019. The intentional misspelling of 'school' as 'skool' is shared between the music slang and the platform brand, which is the only reason the search overlaps. If you arrived here looking for the song, the original is on YouTube under the official Sidhu Moose Wala channel.

Start your own Skool community in 60 seconds.
14-day free trial — no card required. Most community owners decide whether Skool fits within the first week.
About the original 0ld Skool track
Sidhu Moose Wala released 'Old Skool' in October 2018 as part of his early discography. The track features Prem Dhillon on a verse, with production by The Kidd. The song's hook references old-school Punjabi culture, vintage cars, and a nostalgic look back at the artist's earlier roots. It became a streaming hit on release, and its cultural relevance grew enormously after Sidhu's death in May 2022. Today, official streams put it well into the hundreds of millions across YouTube and Spotify combined. The song's title is stylized 'Old Skool' on most official releases — the '0ld' spelling with a zero is a fan/SEO variant that surfaces in search but is not the canonical title. Searches for '0ld skool remix' on YouTube return hundreds of variants from independent producers and DJs.
Why remixes exist
Punjabi music has a strong remix culture and Sidhu Moose Wala's catalog became prime material after 2022. Producers reupload the original with slowed-and-reverbed treatment, drill or trap reproductions, mashups with Western hip-hop instrumentals, and bass-boosted edits aimed at car audio. Most exist outside official distribution channels — they are uploaded directly to YouTube, sometimes to SoundCloud, and occasionally surface on Spotify under different artist credits before being pulled. None of these remixes are sanctioned by the Brown Boys label or Sidhu's estate, but they have driven a meaningful share of the song's modern reach. The cultural pattern is similar to what happened with Mac Miller and XXXTentacion catalogs after their deaths — fan communities preserve and extend the work through derivative releases.
If you actually meant skool.com
Skool.com is unrelated to the Sidhu Moose Wala song. The platform was founded by Sam Ovens in 2019 to host paid coaching communities. It charges $99/month flat per community, ships exactly five surfaces (feed, classroom, calendar, chat, leaderboard), and is currently the default platform for online creators selling monthly access to private groups. Alex Hormozi invested in 2023, which is the reason the platform spiked into mainstream awareness. If your search drifted between the song and the platform — possible if you were exploring brand names or domain availability — the two are entirely separate worlds with no business or product connection. Tools that automate Skool community workflows, like tools4skool, work with the platform side and have nothing to do with music.
Stop leaving DMs, churn, and revenue on the table.
tools4skool plugs the holes Skool ships with. Free plan forever, paid tiers from $29/mo.
Book a demo →Frequently asked
Keep reading
Ready when you are.
Drop your email — we'll loop you in the day access opens.
Book a demo →