Glossary

Music terms explained — tempo, dynamics, mood, production, and everything in between
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〰️ How to read the waveforms in this guide
Wide peaks = slow tempo
or long sustained notes
Dense peaks = fast tempo
or rapid notes
Growing amplitude = crescendo
or building energy
Sharp spikes = percussive hits
drums, plucks, staccato
Gaps between waves = staccato/rests
silence between notes
Tight vibration = vibrato/tremolo
wobble effect on notes
💡 These are conceptual representations — not literal DAW waveforms. They show how a sound feels visually, not its exact audio shape. Use them to understand musical concepts intuitively.
⏱️

Tempo

How fast or slow the music goes
Tempo

How fast the music goes

Measured in BPM (beats per minute). Think of it like a heartbeat. More BPM = faster music.

90 BPM
⟿ Tempo overview — slow to fast pulse density
SLOW MEDIUM FAST
As tempo increases, the pulses get closer together inside the same span of time
Slowest → Fastest
Adagio ~70
Andante ~90
Allegro ~140
Presto ~180
Adagio

Slow & peaceful

Slow tempo — slower than walking pace. Like a Sunday morning. Ballads, emotional songs, lullabies.

⟿ Waveform pattern — Adagio
Wide, slow oscillations — each note has room to breathe
Feel like
🕯️ A candle burning slowly
🌅 A sunrise timelapse
💧 Water dripping into a pond
prompt: "adagio piano ballad"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "The Sound of Silence" — Simon & Garfunkel 🎙️ "Clair de Lune" — Debussy 🎙️ "Someone Like You" — Adele
Andante

Walking pace

Andante literally means “walking” in Italian — a steady, moderate tempo (faster than adagio, slower than allegro). Where most pop and folk songs sit. Great for storytelling and sing-alongs.

⟿ Waveform pattern — Andante
Evenly spaced pulses with room between them, like a steady walk
Feel like
🚶 A relaxed walk
☕ Sunday brunch
🌳 Strolling in the park
prompt: "andante folk ballad" / "mid-tempo pop, walking pace"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Fast Car" — Tracy Chapman 🎙️ "Ho Hey" — The Lumineers
Allegro

Bright & energetic

Allegro means lively and cheerful in Italian. It sits between andante and presto: fast enough to feel driven, but still controlled and melodic. Common in upbeat pop, rock, indie, and orchestral movement pieces.

⟿ Waveform pattern — Allegro
Closer, brighter pulses that feel lively without hitting presto intensity
Feel like
🚲 Riding downhill with momentum
🏃 A confident run
🎉 A room that just came alive
prompt: "allegro indie rock" / "lively orchestral allegro"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Mr. Brightside" — The Killers 🎙️ "Can’t Stop" — Red Hot Chili Peppers
Presto

Very fast

Racing, urgent, intense. EDM drops, metal, chase scenes.

⟿ Waveform pattern — Presto
Dense, rapid oscillations — peaks close together, no breathing room
Feel like
🏎️ F1 car speeding
⚡ Lightning
🌪️ A tornado
prompt: "presto electronic drums"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Flight of the Bumblebee" — Rimsky-Korsakov 🎙️ "Through the Fire and Flames" — DragonForce
Rubato

Flexible tempo

The music speeds up and slows down naturally, like breathing. Creates emotion.

⟿ Waveform — Rubato (irregular spacing, breathing tempo)
Waves stretch and compress — tempo breathes, not metronomic
Feel like
🌊 Ocean waves — no two the same
🎭 A singer pausing for drama
❤️ A heart that races then calms
prompt: "rubato emotional piano"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Chopin Nocturnes" — piano rubato 🎙️ "My Way" — Frank Sinatra (dramatic phrasing)
🥁

Rhythm

How the beat is divided and where accents fall
Syncopation

Off-beat surprise

Imagine clapping where you DON'T expect it. Makes music feel funky, groovy, unpredictable.

⟿ On-beat vs Syncopated hits
ON-BEAT SYNCOPATED
Orange = hits land between beats — the "surprise" that makes you move
Normal vs Syncopated
Normal:   1  2  3  4
Syncopated: 1    2&   3&   4
prompt: "syncopated funky rhythm"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Superstition" — Stevie Wonder 🎙️ "Take Five" — Dave Brubeck
Groove

Makes you move

The feeling that makes your body want to dance or nod. Groove is less about complexity and more about the pocket feeling right.

⟿ Groove — steady pulse with slight push-pull
Steady pulse plus slight push-pull = the pocket that feels good
Feel like
🕺 Foot tapping without trying
🎸 Bass and drums locking in
💃 Effortless movement
prompt: "groovy funk bassline, deep pocket"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Superstition" — Stevie Wonder 🎙️ "Get Up (I Feel Like Being a) Sex Machine" — James Brown
Polyrhythm

Multiple rhythms at once

Like two people clapping different patterns at the same time. It creates rich, interlocking motion rather than one single pulse.

⟿ Polyrhythm — two patterns overlaid (3 vs 2)
Pattern A (3) Pattern B (2)
Two independent rhythms create a layered, hypnotic feel
Imagine
Track 1: 🥁 · · 🥁 · · 🥁
Track 2: 🎵 · 🎵 · 🎵 · 🎵
prompt: "polyrhythmic afrobeat drums"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Kuku" — Fela Kuti 🎙️ "Bloom" — Radiohead (3 vs 4)
Straight

Even, metronomic subdivision

Every subdivision lands in a perfectly even grid. Tight, mechanical, driving, and common in pop, EDM, and modern rock.

⟿ Straight beat placement
perfectly even spacing
Each hit lands on the grid with no bounce or delay
When to use in prompts
🤖 "straight eighths, mechanical"
🥁 "tight EDM groove"
⚙️ "metronomic indie rock rhythm"
prompt: "straight eighth-note groove, clean indie drums"
🎵 Examples
🎙️ "Around the World" — Daft Punk 🎙️ "Take On Me" — A-ha
Swing

Bouncy, delayed second subdivision

The second subdivision arrives slightly late, which creates that rolling jazz, blues, and shuffle bounce. It feels looser and more human than straight time.

⟿ Swing beat placement
2nd hit pushed late
The offbeat lags behind the grid, creating bounce
When to use in prompts
🎷 "swing rhythm, jazz feel"
🎵 "shuffle groove"
🥁 "brushed drums with swing"
prompt: "swinging jazz trio, brushed drums"
🎵 Examples
🎙️ "Sing Sing Sing" — Benny Goodman 🎙️ "Pride and Joy" — Stevie Ray Vaughan
Half-time

Same BPM, heavier feel

The actual BPM stays the same, but the backbeat shifts so the groove feels slower and heavier. The snare lands later, which creates weight and space.

⟿ Half-time snare placement
snare on 3
Backbeat shifts later, making the groove feel slower and heavier
When to use in prompts
🏔️ trap or heavy hip-hop feel
🌫️ lo-fi, moody verses
🧱 slow, weighty breakdowns
prompt: "half-time trap beat, heavy 808"
🎵 Examples
🎙️ "HUMBLE." — Kendrick Lamar 🎙️ "When Doves Cry" — Prince
Double-time

Same BPM, more urgency

The tempo stays the same, but the subdivision density makes everything feel faster and more intense. Useful for punk, metal, and high-energy transitions.

⟿ Double-time subdivision density
more notes inside the same bar
More subdivisions per bar makes the groove feel urgent
When to use in prompts
⚡ fast punk or hardcore feel
🔥 urgent verse lift
🥁 energetic fills and transitions
prompt: "double-time punk drums, urgent chorus lift"
🎵 Examples
🎙️ "Welcome to the Black Parade" bridge — My Chemical Romance 🎙️ Fast skate-punk drum feel
🔊

Dynamics & Expression

Volume, emotion, and how sounds feel
Dynamics

The volume journey

How loud or soft the music is — and how it changes. This creates emotion and drama.

⟿ Waveform — pp to ff (amplitude = volume)
pp p f ff
Wave height = loudness · Use "quiet verse, loud chorus" in prompts
Volume Scale
pp
barely a whisper
soft
loud
ff
very loud
prompt: "dynamic range, quiet intro building to loud chorus"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Bohemian Rhapsody" — Queen (huge dynamic contrast) 🎙️ "Fix You" — Coldplay (soft → massive)
Crescendo

Getting louder gradually

Music that builds up. Creates anticipation and power.

⟿ Waveform — Crescendo (growing amplitude)
Amplitude grows from left (quiet) to right (loud)
Visualize
🔈 → 🔉 → 🔊
Like a wave building before it crashes
Used to build up to a chorus
prompt: "crescendo into powerful chorus"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Bohemian Rhapsody" — Queen (quiet intro → opera section) 🎙️ "Blackbird" → "Back in the U.S.S.R." — The Beatles (White Album)
Diminuendo

Getting softer gradually

The opposite of crescendo. Music that fades out (also called decrescendo). Creates calm or sadness.

⟿ Waveform — Diminuendo / Decrescendo (shrinking amplitude)
Amplitude shrinks from left (loud) to right (silence)
Visualize
🔊 → 🔉 → 🔈
Like a fire dying down
Good for outro / ending
prompt: "decrescendo soft outro"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Hey Jude" — The Beatles (na-na-na fade) 🎙️ "Layla" (outro) — Eric Clapton
Staccato

Short, sharp notes

Like speaking in short bursts. Punchy, percussive, energetic.

⟿ Waveform — Staccato vs Legato
STACCATO LEGATO
Left: isolated short bursts with silence between · Right: connected flowing notes
Visualize
Staccato: 🎵 · 🎵 · 🎵 · 🎵
Legato:   🎵—🎵—🎵—🎵
Think: a music box or plucked guitar
prompt: "staccato strings, playful"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Sabre Dance" — Khachaturian 🎙️ "Bad Guy" — Billie Eilish (bass staccato)
Legato

Smooth, connected notes

Notes flow into each other like water. Smooth, romantic, lyrical.

⟿ Waveform — Legato
Continuous, unbroken wave — notes connected without silence
Feel like
🌊 Water flowing without a break
🕊️ A gliding bird
💆 Relaxing and smooth
prompt: "legato cello melody"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Experience" — Ludovico Einaudi 🎙️ "All I Want" — Kodaline (string legato)
Vibrato

Wobbly, warm notes

A slight, rapid variation in pitch. Makes vocals sound emotional and alive.

⟿ Waveform — Flat vs Vibrato
NO VIBRATO VIBRATO
Pitch oscillates gently above and below the center note — creates warmth
Imagine
A note without vibrato: ——————
A note with vibrato:    ∿∿∿∿∿∿
Think: opera singer holding a note
prompt: "vocals with vibrato, emotional"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "I Will Always Love You" — Whitney Houston 🎙️ Opera arias — Pavarotti, Callas
Tremolo

Rapid note shaking

Very fast repetition of a single note. Creates tension, urgency, drama.

⟿ Waveform — Tremolo (rapid amplitude flicker)
Rapid on/off amplitude — same pitch repeated extremely fast
Feel like
🫀 A trembling heart
⚡ Thunder rumbling
🎻 Intense violin in a horror film
prompt: "tremolo violin, tense atmosphere"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Psycho" — Bernard Herrmann (shower scene) 🎙️ "Misirlou" — Dick Dale (surf guitar tremolo)
Accent

A punched note

One note gets extra emphasis — louder or more forceful than the rest.

⟿ Waveform — Accented hits (tall spikes among smaller)
Tall spikes = accented beats (e.g. backbeat on 2 and 4)
Visualize
🎵 🎵 🎵 🎵 🎵 🎵 🎵
Creates punch and impact in the rhythm
prompt: "accented downbeats, powerful drums"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "We Will Rock You" — Queen (stomp-stomp-clap) 🎙️ "Seven Nation Army" — The White Stripes (accented riff)
🏗️

Song Structure

The blueprint of a song

🗺️ Typical Song Map

Intro
Verse 1
Pre-Chorus
Chorus
Verse 2
Chorus
Bridge
Chorus
Outro
Verse

The storytelling part

Each verse usually has different words but the same melody. It tells the story, sets the scene.

⟿ Waveform — Verse (low, steady energy)
Moderate, consistent amplitude — building the story, not exploding yet
Think of
📖 Chapter 1 of a book
Same tune, new words each time
prompt: "verse with storytelling feel, sparse arrangement"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Lose Yourself" — Eminem (story verses) 🎙️ "Stan" — Eminem (verse-driven narrative)
Chorus

The main hook

The part everyone sings along to. Repeated, catchy, emotionally powerful. The heart of the song.

⟿ Waveform — Chorus (peak energy, full amplitude)
Full, sustained energy — the "payoff" section
Think of
🎤 "Let It Go" from Frozen
🔁 Same words AND same melody
💥 Most energetic part of the song
prompt: "powerful anthemic chorus, sing-along"
🎵 Iconic choruses
🎙️ "We Will Rock You" — Queen 🎙️ "Smells Like Teen Spirit" — Nirvana 🎙️ "Don't Stop Believin'" — Journey
Bridge

The surprise section

Breaks the pattern. A different melody and mood. Creates contrast before the final chorus.

⟿ Waveform — Bridge (contrast and detour)
new section
The contour shifts away from the main pattern, then points back toward the chorus
Feel like
🎢 A plot twist in a movie
🌈 The sun appearing after rain
Often slower, more emotional
prompt: "emotional bridge, stripped back"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Someone Like You" — Adele (piano bridge) 🎙️ "With or Without You" — U2 (build bridge)
Pre-Chorus

The build-up

A short section between verse and chorus that builds tension. Makes the chorus hit harder.

⟿ Waveform — Pre-Chorus (rising energy into chorus)
→ chorus
Amplitude climbs — tension before the release
Feel like
🎢 The slow climb before the drop
🌊 The wave pulling back before crashing
📈 Energy rising
prompt: "tense pre-chorus building to drop"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Shake It Off" — Taylor Swift ("And the players gonna play...") 🎙️ "Rolling in the Deep" — Adele
Intro

The opening door

Sets the mood before the vocals start. Tells listeners what world they're entering.

⟿ Waveform — Intro (fade-in or sparse start)
quiet start
Often sparse or swelling — sets the scene
Think of
🎬 Movie opening credits
🌅 The first brush of paint on canvas
🎭 The curtain rising
prompt: "cinematic intro, slow build"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Thunderstruck" — AC/DC (iconic intro riff) 🎙️ "Bitter Sweet Symphony" — The Verve (string intro)
Outro

The closing door

Ends the song. Can fade out slowly or end abruptly. Leaves a final impression.

⟿ Waveform — Outro (fade or drop to silence)
fade out
Amplitude tapers to silence — or hard stop
Think of
🎬 End credits rolling
🌆 Sunset after a long day
✌️ Final goodbye
prompt: "fading outro, peaceful ending"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Hey Jude" — The Beatles (long fade) 🎙️ "A Day in the Life" — The Beatles (final chord)
Hook

The earworm

The most memorable part — a melody, lyric, or rhythm that gets stuck in your head.

⟿ Waveform — Hook (repeated catchy shape)
repeat = hook
Same contour repeated — the part you can't forget
Think of
🪝 The thing that "hooks" you
🎵 "Ba-na-na-na" (Banana phone!)
💡 3–10 seconds that define the song
prompt: "catchy hook, repeat vocal melody"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Bad Guy" — Billie Eilish ("duh") 🎙️ "Uptown Funk" — Bruno Mars (horn hook)
Drop

The explosive moment

In electronic music: the sudden release of maximum energy after a build-up. The moment everyone goes crazy.

⟿ Waveform — Drop (sudden max amplitude)
Quiet build-up → vertical wall of sound → maxed-out dense waves
Feel like
💣 A bomb exploding
🎆 Fireworks at midnight
🏄 The wave crashing at full force
prompt: "massive EDM drop, heavy bass"
🎵 Famous drops
🎙️ "Animals" — Martin Garrix (2013) 🎙️ "Clarity" — Zedd ft. Foxes 🎙️ "Scary Monsters and Nice Sprites" — Skrillex
Breakdown

Stripped-back section

Where the arrangement drops to almost nothing — fewer instruments, less density, often no drums. Creates contrast before the next build or drop. Common in EDM, metal, and pop.

⟿ Waveform — Breakdown (energy pulled away)
less density
Big peaks fall away into a thinner, quieter line before the next section rebuilds
Feel like
🌙 The calm before the storm
🎚️ Everything drops out except one element
📉 Tension through subtraction
prompt: "breakdown section, stripped to vocals and piano" / "post-drop breakdown"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ EDM tracks — build, drop, breakdown, build again 🎙️ "Numb" — Linkin Park (quiet breakdown)
🎵

Melody & Harmony

The "what" of music — notes, chords, and feelings
Melody

The main tune

What you hum after hearing a song. A sequence of single notes that you recognize.

⟿ Waveform — Melody (single line, contour you can hum)
One clear line — the tune you sing or whistle
Think of
🎶 "Happy Birthday" tune
🎤 The vocal line in a song
If you can hum it → that's the melody
prompt: "memorable melody, singable hook"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Shape of You" — Ed Sheeran (vocal melody) 🎙️ "Take On Me" — A-ha (iconic melody)
Harmony

Support for the melody

Notes played simultaneously that support the melody.

⟿ Harmony — one melody line supported by stacked notes
A lead line plus supporting notes creates depth and colour
Think of
Melody = the line you follow
Harmony = the colour underneath
Together they create the fuller feeling
prompt: "rich harmony under lead vocal"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Because" — The Beatles (stacked vocal harmony) 🎙️ "Bohemian Rhapsody" — Queen (layered harmonies)
Chord

Notes played together

Three or more notes played together.

⟿ Chord — multiple notes strike at the same time
Grouped vertical hits show notes sounding together as one harmony block
Think of
🎹 Piano block chords
🎸 Strummed guitar chords
Chords are the building blocks of harmony
prompt: "lush piano chords"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Let It Be" — The Beatles (piano chords) 🎙️ "Wonderwall" — Oasis (strummed guitar chords)
Chord Progression

The harmonic journey

A sequence of chords that forms the harmonic foundation.

⟿ Chord progression — harmony moves from one block to the next
The harmony changes shape over time instead of staying on one chord
Common progressions
I-IV-V-I = classic pop/blues
I-V-vi-IV = common modern pop
ii-V-I = jazz standard
prompt: "melancholic chord progression"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Let It Be" — The Beatles (I-V-vi-IV family) 🎙️ "No Woman, No Cry" — Bob Marley (classic looping progression)
Key

The tonal center

The tonal center of a piece based on a specific scale.

⟿ Key — phrases wander, then come back home
home note
Music can travel, but the key is the place it wants to resolve to
Think of
🏠 The note that feels like home
The rest of the music points back to it
prompt: "in E minor"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Piano Man" — Billy Joel (clear tonal center) 🎙️ "Rolling in the Deep" — Adele (anchored in C minor)
Scale

A note collection

A sequence of notes in ascending or descending order.

⟿ Scale — step-by-step path through available notes
A scale is a step-by-step ladder of notes a melody can use
Think of
Do-Re-Mi-Fa-Sol-La-Ti-Do
A palette of notes the song can draw from
prompt: "simple major scale melody"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Do-Re-Mi" — The Sound of Music 🎙️ Basic classical practice scales and etudes
Major

Bright and happy

A key or chord with a bright, happy sound.

⟿ Major — bright, open contour
MAJOR ☀️
Bright, open, stable feeling
Feel like
☀️ open
🎉 uplifting
😊 cheerful
prompt: "upbeat major-key pop song"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Walking on Sunshine" — Katrina and the Waves 🎙️ "Happy" — Pharrell Williams
Minor

Darker and sadder

A key or chord with a darker, sadder sound.

⟿ Minor — lower, heavier emotional contour
MINOR 🌙
Less bright, more inward and emotionally weighted
Feel like
🌧️ emotional
🌙 introspective
💭 darker colour
prompt: "minor-key ballad, emotional"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Someone Like You" — Adele 🎙️ "Mad World" — Tears for Fears / Gary Jules
Modal

Beyond major and minor

Different flavours of scale beyond major/minor, like Dorian, Lydian, or Phrygian.

⟿ Modal — same notes, different centers
modes
Changing the tonal center changes the flavour
The main modes — feel & genre
☀️ Ionian = major (happy, pop)
🎷 Dorian = minor but hopeful (jazz, funk, Daft Punk)
🌙 Phrygian = dark, Spanish/metal feel
🌊 Lydian = dreamy, sci-fi, floating (John Williams)
🤠 Mixolydian = rock/blues "bittersweet" major
🕯️ Aeolian = natural minor (most sad songs)
😈 Locrian = unstable, dark (rarely used)
prompt: "Dorian mode, jazz-funk groove" / "Lydian synth pad, dreamy sci-fi"
🎵 Modal examples
🎙️ Dorian: "Get Lucky" — Daft Punk 🎙️ Mixolydian: "Sweet Home Alabama" — Lynyrd Skynyrd 🎙️ Lydian: Superman Theme — John Williams
Pentatonic

A safe five-note scale

A 5-note scale that makes it hard to hit a wrong note.

⟿ Pentatonic — fewer notes, cleaner melodic path
With only five notes, melodies stay open and hard to clash
Think of
🎸 blues guitar solos
🎤 easy singable phrases
Fewer notes, fewer clashes
prompt: "pentatonic guitar solo"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "My Girl" — The Temptations (pentatonic melody) 🎙️ Blues and folk guitar solos built on minor pentatonic
Interval

The distance between pitches

The distance between two pitches.

⟿ Interval — small step vs wide leap
step leap
Intervals describe how near or far two notes are from each other
Examples
C to D = small step
C to G = bigger leap
prompt: "wide melodic leaps"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Somewhere Over the Rainbow" — opening octave leap 🎙️ "Jaws" theme — tight semitone interval
Octave

Same note, higher or lower

The interval between one note and another with double its frequency.

⟿ Octave — same pitch class at two heights
low C high C
Same note name, but the higher one vibrates twice as fast
Think of
C to the next C
Same note name, different height
prompt: "melody doubled in octaves"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Somewhere Over the Rainbow" — octave opening 🎙️ Disco bass and piano often doubling lines in octaves
Arpeggio

Broken chord

Instead of playing all notes of a chord at once, play them one by one in sequence.

Visualize
Chord: 🎵🎵🎵 (all at once)
Arpeggio: 🎵 → 🎵 → 🎵 (one by one)
Think: harp gliding, piano intro
⟿ Waveform — Arpeggio (notes in sequence, not block chord)
one by one
Staggered hits = chord broken into steps
prompt: "arpeggiated piano, dreamy"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Clocks" — Coldplay (piano arpeggio) 🎙️ "Blinding Lights" — The Weeknd (synth arp)
Counterpoint

Independent melodies together

Two or more independent melodies played together.

⟿ Counterpoint — two lines moving differently at once
Each line has its own shape, but both still sound coherent together
Think of
One line goes up
Another line goes down
Both still make sense together
prompt: "two-voice counterpoint"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ Bach inventions and fugues 🎙️ "Scarborough Fair/Canticle" — Simon & Garfunkel
Dissonance

Musical tension

Notes that clash and feel "wrong" together. Creates tension that demands resolution.

Feel like
😬 A wrong note in a lullaby
🎭 Suspense in a thriller
⚡ The moment before a storm
⟿ Waveform — Dissonance (clashing, unstable)
tension
Unstable, "wrong" feeling — demands resolution
prompt: "dissonant jazz chords, tense"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Black Angels" — George Crumb 🎙️ Jazz tension chords — Bill Evans
Resolution

Tension → Relief

After dissonance, moving to a chord that feels "right." The musical equivalent of exhaling.

Feel like
😌 Finally solving a puzzle
☀️ Clouds parting after rain
🏠 Arriving home after a long trip
⟿ Waveform — Resolution (tension → calm)
home
Settling on a stable chord — the "ahhh" moment
prompt: "satisfying resolution, orchestral"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ End of "Hey Jude" (resolution to major) 🎙️ Classical cadences — V to I
🔁

Music Patterns

Short ideas that repeat, anchor, or cycle through a track
Riff

Short repeated phrase

A catchy melodic or rhythmic idea that repeats, often becoming the hook. Guitar riffs, bass riffs, and synth riffs all give a track a recognizable identity fast.

Think of
🎸 "Smoke on the Water" — four notes, unforgettable
🎹 Synth riff in "Blinding Lights"
Same phrase, again and again — the earworm
⟿ Riff — the same short shape repeated
repeat repeat repeat
A riff works because the same small pattern keeps returning
prompt: "driving guitar riff" / "catchy synth riff" / "bass riff, funky"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Smoke on the Water" — Deep Purple 🎙️ "Seven Nation Army" — The White Stripes
Ostinato

A musical loop

A pattern that repeats over and over. It can be melodic, harmonic, or rhythmic, and it creates a hypnotic engine underneath the song.

⟿ Ostinato — identical repeating shape
loop
Same pattern repeated, creating drive and momentum
Think of
🔄 Repeated piano or bass figures
🌀 Hypnotic, meditative loops
🎬 A pattern that keeps pushing the scene forward
prompt: "ostinato bass pattern, hypnotic"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Rasputin" — Boney M. 🎙️ "Boléro" — Ravel
Drone

One note held forever

A single sustained note or chord that stays constant while everything else moves above it. It creates hypnotic stability with a little built-in tension.

⟿ Waveform — Drone (flat constant tone beneath moving harmony)
DRONE (held note) MELODY (moves freely above)
Green = fixed drone below · Purple = melody free to wander above it
Where you hear drones
🇮🇳 Indian classical (tanpura)
⚡ Metal (open low E string)
🎓 Bagpipes (the constant note)
🌌 Ambient / minimalist electronic
prompt: "meditative drone, Indian classical feel, tanpura, hypnotic"
🎵 Drone examples
🎙️ "Om" — any Tibetan chant 🎙️ "The Becoming" — Nine Inch Nails (industrial drone)
Vamp

A short groove that cycles

A vamp is a short repeated chord or groove pattern, often used to hold a mood while vocals, solos, or spoken lines move on top. It is less about a hook than a stable backdrop.

⟿ Vamp — a two-chord groove cycling in place
hold the groove
A vamp loops a small harmony pocket instead of moving through a full progression
Think of
🎹 Two chords cycling under a solo
🎤 A groove the singer can stretch over
🎷 Jazz, soul, funk, and musical theatre intros
prompt: "soul vamp, looping Rhodes chords" / "funk vamp, tight two-chord groove"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ Jazz and soul intros that sit on one or two chords 🎙️ Broadway pit-band vamps under dialogue
🌍

Genres & Styles

Musical worlds — mix and match for unique results
Blues

Raw, soulful, emotional

Born from African American music traditions. Expressive guitar, emotional vocals, simple chord patterns.

⟿ Blues — 12-bar feel, shuffle, call-and-response
Swing feel, bent notes, space for expression
🎸 Mississippi Delta nights · slow guitar solos · feeling the pain
prompt: "slow blues guitar, soulful vocals"
🎵 Listen to
🎙️ "The Thrill Is Gone" — B.B. King 🎙️ "Cross Road Blues" — Robert Johnson
Jazz

Sophisticated & improvised

Complex harmonies, swinging rhythms, improvisation. The music feels "alive" and spontaneous.

⟿ Jazz — swing pulse, melodic freedom, harmonic motion
Loose swing and melodic turns over richer harmony
🎷 Smoky bar · late night · trumpet wailing · piano noodling
prompt: "late night jazz trio, intimate"
🎵 Listen to
🎙️ "Take Five" — Dave Brubeck Quartet 🎙️ "So What" — Miles Davis
Funk

Groove-heavy & rhythmic

All about the groove. Syncopated bass, tight drums, wah-wah guitar. Makes you move.

⟿ Funk — syncopation, tight hits
Laid-back, swung, groove-forward
🕺 Your body moves before your brain decides · slapping bass · chicken-scratch guitar
prompt: "funky bassline, tight groove"
🎵 Funk examples
🎙️ "Give Up the Funk" — Parliament 🎙️ "Uptown Funk" — Bruno Mars
Ambient

Texture over melody

More about creating a space or mood than telling a story. Like music as a painting.

⟿ Ambient — wide, soft, evolving
Slow-moving, spacious, minimal attack
🌌 Floating in space · focus music · meditation · no clear beat
prompt: "ambient soundscape, dreamy pads"
🎵 Listen to
🎙️ "Music for Airports" — Brian Eno 🎙️ "Weightless" — Marconi Union
R&B

Soulful & groove-driven

Combines gospel emotion with blues groove and pop melody. Smooth, sensual, expressive.

⟿ R&B — smooth contour, soft pulse, expressive runs
Silky phrasing and gentle groove with vocal expression up front
💜 Smooth melodies · falsetto vocals · soulful runs · late nights
prompt: "smooth R&B, soulful female vocals"
🎵 R&B examples
🎙️ "Untitled (How Does It Feel)" — D'Angelo 🎙️ "Adorn" — Miguel
EDM / Electronic

Built in a computer

Music made entirely with electronic instruments. Can go from chilled to euphoric.

💻 Synthesizers · drum machines · drops · festival energy · 808 bass
⟿ EDM — build, drop, four-on-the-floor
DROP
Build-up then full-amplitude drop
prompt: "festival EDM, euphoric build and drop"
🎵 EDM examples
🎙️ "Titanium" — David Guetta 🎙️ "Wake Me Up" — Avicii
Reggae

Offbeat & laid-back

Jamaican roots. The rhythm emphasizes the "and" beats — feels like a gentle sway.

🌴 Sunshine · Rastafari vibes · offbeat guitar ("skank") · deep bass
⟿ Reggae — offbeat skank, one-drop
off-beat chops
Guitar/keys on the "and" — relaxed, sunny
prompt: "reggae rhythm, laid-back bass"
🎵 Reggae examples
🎙️ "No Woman, No Cry" — Bob Marley 🎙️ "Could You Be Loved" — Bob Marley
Folk

Storytelling & acoustic

Traditional, community music. Acoustic instruments, narrative lyrics, raw and honest.

🪵 Campfire · acoustic guitar · honest lyrics · rustic feel
⟿ Folk — acoustic, organic, story-led
Natural dynamics, fingerpicking texture
prompt: "acoustic folk, fingerpicked guitar, storytelling"
🎵 Folk examples
🎙️ "The Boxer" — Simon & Garfunkel 🎙️ "Holocene" — Bon Iver
Bossa Nova

Brazilian jazz-samba hybrid

Born in 1950s Rio. Gentle samba rhythm, jazz chords, soft nylon guitar, breathy vocals. Sophisticated and intimate — perfect beach-café atmosphere.

⟿ Bossa Nova — soft syncopation, flowing nylon guitar
Gentle offbeats and soft contour instead of hard accents
Signature elements
🎸 Nylon string guitar with samba rhythm
🎹 Lush jazz chords (maj7, min9, dominant13)
🎤 Soft, close vocals — almost whispered
🇧🇷 Breezy, sophisticated, effortlessly cool
prompt: "bossa nova, nylon guitar, breathy vocals, jazz chords, Rio feel"
🎵 Essentials
🎙️ "The Girl from Ipanema" — João Gilberto & Astrud Gilberto 🎙️ "Garota de Ipanema" — Antônio Carlos Jobim
Afrobeat

West African groove + funk

Created by Fela Kuti in Nigeria. Complex polyrhythmic drums, interlocking horns, political lyrics, hypnotic repetition. Massive influence on modern pop and dance music.

⟿ Afrobeat — interlocking polyrhythms + horn punches
drums horns
Percussion locks in a grid while horns stab above it
Signature elements
🥁 Complex polyrhythmic drums + shakers
🎷 Call-and-response brass section
🎸 Interlocking guitar lines (like puzzle pieces)
🔁 Long, repetitive, hypnotic structures
prompt: "Afrobeat groove, polyrhythmic drums, brass horns, hypnotic, Fela Kuti style"
🎵 Roots + modern
🎙️ "Water No Get Enemy" — Fela Kuti 🎙️ "Essence" — Wizkid ft. Tems (modern Afrobeats)
Flamenco

Spanish passion & intensity

From Andalusia, Spain. Intricate fingerpicking (rasgueado), handclaps (palmas), stamping feet, raw emotional singing (cante). Dramatic, proud, intensely human.

⟿ Flamenco — sharp strums, claps, sudden bursts
Hard percussive attacks with dramatic vocal/guitar surges
Signature elements
🎸 Classical guitar: fast rasgueado strumming
👏 Palmas (handclaps) as percussion
👠 Zapateado (footwork) rhythm
🎤 Cante: raw, wailing, emotional vocal
prompt: "flamenco guitar, rasgueado, passionate, Spanish classical"
🎵 Flamenco touchstones
🎙️ "Recuerdos de la Alhambra" — Francisco Tárrega 🎙️ "Entre Dos Aguas" — Paco de Lucía
🎸

Instrumentation & Texture

What plays, and how full or empty it sounds
Arrangement

Who plays what

How all the instruments are organized together. A good arrangement makes every element serve the song.

⟿ Arrangement — who enters when (sparse → dense)
build
Elements added over time = arrangement build
Like a recipe
🥁 Drums = foundation
🎸 Bass = glue
🎹 Keys = harmony
🎤 Vocals = lead character
prompt: "sparse arrangement, just piano and voice"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Skinny Love" — Bon Iver (sparse) 🎙️ "A Day in the Life" — The Beatles (dense)
Sparse vs Dense

Empty vs Full sound

Sparse

Few instruments with space between notes.

Dense

Many instruments playing together.

⟿ Sparse vs Dense — few events vs constant activity
sparse dense
Left leaves silence between hits · Right stays constantly occupied
Visualize
Sparse: 🎵        🎵        🎵
Dense:  🎵🎵🎵🎵🎵🎵🎵🎵🎵🎵
prompt: "dense orchestral wall of sound"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ Sparse: "Hurt" — Johnny Cash (piano + voice) 🎙️ Dense: "Paranoid Android" — Radiohead
Timbre

Sound "color"

What makes a piano sound different from a guitar even at the same note. The "personality" of a sound.

Examples
🎻 Violin = bright, cutting
🎷 Sax = warm, breathy
🎸 Guitar = crisp, woody
🎹 Piano = clear, resonant
⟿ Same note, different timbre (wave shape = colour)
bright warm
Different "colour" at same pitch — use "warm", "bright", "nasal" in prompts
prompt: "warm timbre, mellow saxophone"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ Warm: "Careless Whisper" — George Michael (sax) 🎙️ Bright: "Sweet Child O' Mine" — Guns N' Roses (guitar)
Layering

Stacking sounds

Adding multiple instruments or tracks on top of each other to create richness and depth.

Like photo editing
Layer 1: 🎹 Piano
Layer 2: 🎸 Guitar
Layer 3: 🎻 Strings
Layer 4: 🥁 Drums
Result: 🎶 Full sound
⟿ Layering — stacked waves = thick sound
layers
Multiple parts = fuller, richer sound
prompt: "layered synths, thick texture"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Strawberry Fields Forever" — The Beatles 🎙️ "Hide and Seek" — Imogen Heap (vocal layers)
Orchestration

Assigning roles

Deciding which instrument plays which part. The skill of giving each instrument its moment.

⟿ Orchestration — many instruments, one texture
orchestra
Strings, brass, woods — blended ensemble
Think of
🎬 Directing actors in a film
Strings for emotion, brass for power, woodwinds for detail
prompt: "full orchestration, cinematic strings and brass"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Star Wars" theme — John Williams 🎙️ "Lux Aeterna" — Clint Mansell
🎤

Vocal Techniques

How the voice can be used as an instrument
Falsetto

Airy high notes

A high, light vocal register that sounds almost breathy. Above normal range.

Think of
🌬️ Very light, floating voice
🎵 Justin Timberlake's high notes
✨ Sounds almost angelic or ethereal
⟿ Falsetto — light, airy (softer amplitude, floaty)
Soft, floating — high register, less chest
prompt: "male falsetto vocals, ethereal"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Cry Me a River" — Justin Timberlake 🎙️ "Take On Me" — A-ha
Belt

Powerful high notes

Full, chest-voice power at high pitches. The opposite of falsetto — strong and intense.

Think of
💪 Beyoncé holding a high note
🏟️ Stadium-filling vocal power
🔥 Raw, intense emotion
⟿ Belt — full amplitude, sustained power
full power
Strong, sustained — chest voice at high pitch
prompt: "powerful belt, stadium anthem vocals"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Listen" — Beyoncé 🎙️ "I Will Always Love You" — Whitney Houston
Melisma

One word, many notes

Singing many notes on a single syllable. The "Oh-oh-oh-oh-oh" style of vocal runs.

Visualize
Normal: A-ma-zing
Melisma: A-ma-zi~~~ng (many notes)
Think: Mariah Carey, gospel music
⟿ Melisma — many notes on one syllable (runs)
one word ~~~
Rapid note changes on one syllable — vocal run
prompt: "melismatic vocals, gospel style"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Emotion" — Destiny's Child 🎙️ "Vision of Love" — Mariah Carey
Chest Voice

Full, grounded core tone

The stronger, more speech-like part of the voice. It feels direct, solid, and present, especially in verses and lower-to-mid ranges.

Prompt meaning
🧱 Firm and centered rather than airy
🎙️ Natural pop, rock, country, soul delivery
🔥 More body and weight than falsetto
⟿ Chest Voice — dense center, strong core energy
Compact, steady energy with more body than air
prompt: "strong chest voice lead, soulful and direct"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Rolling in the Deep" — Adele 🎙️ "Tennessee Whiskey" — Chris Stapleton
Head Voice

Lifted, resonant upper tone

A connected upper register that is lighter than chest voice but fuller and more supported than falsetto. Useful when you want height without sounding fragile.

Prompt meaning
☁️ Elevated and open rather than heavy
🎼 Great for soaring pop choruses and emotional hooks
✨ More resonant than airy falsetto
⟿ Head Voice — lifted upper resonance, smooth support
Higher placement with clarity and support, not just breath
prompt: "female head voice chorus, soaring and emotional"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Halo" — Beyoncé 🎙️ "Chandelier" — Sia
A Cappella

Voice only, no instruments

Singing without any instrumental backing. All harmony comes from human voices.

Think of
🫁 Just breath and voice
🎓 College choir
📣 Barbershop quartet
⟿ A cappella — voices only (no instrumental wave)
voices only
Layered vocal lines — no instruments
prompt: "a cappella harmonies, vocal group"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Creep" — Pentatonix 🎙️ "Somebody That I Used to Know" — Walk off the Earth (vocal percussion)
Call and Response

Musical conversation

One voice or instrument "calls," another "responds." Like a musical dialogue.

Like
🙋 "Can I get an amen?" → 🙌 "Amen!"
🎺 Trumpet phrase → 🎷 Saxophone replies
Gospel, blues, African music
⟿ Call and Response — call (phrase) → response (answer)
call response
Alternating phrases — dialogue in music
prompt: "call and response gospel choir"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Chain of Fools" — Aretha Franklin 🎙️ Gospel choirs — "Oh Happy Day"
Crooning

Soft, intimate singing

Close-mic, gentle, romantic. Like the singer is whispering in your ear.

Think of
🕯️ Frank Sinatra, Michael Bublé
🥂 Candlelit dinner music
💋 Intimate and velvet-smooth
⟿ Crooning — soft, smooth, intimate (low dynamics)
Gentle amplitude — close, velvet tone
prompt: "crooning male vocals, jazz standard"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "My Way" — Frank Sinatra 🎙️ "Feeling Good" — Michael Bublé
Harmony Vocals

Stacked backing voices

Additional vocal lines sung above or below the lead. In prompting, this usually means width, polish, and a bigger chorus rather than solo intimacy.

Use when you want
🎶 Wide choruses and richer hooks
👥 Lead plus backing vocal stack
🌈 Pop, indie, gospel, folk, and cinematic lift
⟿ Harmony Vocals — one lead line with supporting layers
Lead plus upper and lower support creates width and sheen
prompt: "lush harmony vocals, stacked chorus, wide backing vocals"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Because" — The Beatles 🎙️ "Dreams" — Fleetwood Mac
Ad-libs

Extra vocal flourishes around the lead

Short improvised phrases, echoes, shouts, runs, and background comments added around the main vocal. In AI prompts, this often gives tracks a more live, expressive, R&B, gospel, or trap feel.

Usually sounds like
🎤 Little “yeah,” “uh,” “come on,” or echoed phrases
🌟 Extra runs at line endings
🔥 More personality and performance energy
⟿ Ad-libs — main phrase with scattered answer lines
The lead carries the line while smaller phrases pop around it
prompt: "soulful female ad-libs" / "trap vocal ad-libs in the background"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ Whitney Houston live vocals 🎙️ modern R&B and trap hooks with background ad-libs
Whisper Vocals

Near-silent, intimate delivery

Extremely soft singing or spoken-singing with lots of air and very little body. Useful in prompts when you want closeness, secrecy, fragility, or tension.

Prompt meaning
🌫️ Close-mic, delicate, secretive tone
🕯️ Common in dark pop, ambient, and cinematic intros
🎧 Less sung projection, more breath and proximity
⟿ Whisper Vocals — low amplitude with lots of air
Tiny contour, mostly breath, very close to the listener
prompt: "whispered female vocals, dark intimate pop"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Bury a Friend" — Billie Eilish 🎙️ whispery trip-hop and ambient pop intros
Breathy / Raspy / Gravelly

Vocal texture control

How air and friction shape vocal tone. These single words do enormous work in Suno prompts — they change the entire character of a voice.

⟿ Breathy vs Raspy vs Gravelly — air, friction, weight
breathy raspy gravelly
More air, then friction, then low rough weight
Texture guide
💨 Breathy: air escapes with the tone — soft, intimate, sensual. Think Billie Eilish, early Marilyn Monroe

🪨 Raspy: rough edge on the voice — emotional, lived-in, world-weary. Tom Waits, Janis Joplin

🏔️ Gravelly: deeper, coarser texture — aged, authoritative, powerful. Johnny Cash, Leonard Cohen
prompt: "breathy female vocals" / "raspy rock vocals" / "gravelly baritone"
🎵 Texture references
💨 Breathy: "bad guy" — Billie Eilish 🪨 Raspy: "Piece of My Heart" — Janis Joplin 🏔️ Gravelly: "Hurt" — Johnny Cash
Spoken Word

Voice without melody

Non-melodic vocal delivery — words spoken with rhythm and intention but not pitched like singing. Includes poetry, monologues, narration over music. Between rap and speech.

⟿ Spoken Word — rhythmic speech, minimal pitch contour
Blocky speech rhythm with only slight melodic movement
Types & uses
📖 Narration: storytelling over ambient/cinematic music
🎭 Spoken intro/outro: sets a scene before music starts
🎤 Half-spoken rap: rhythmic speech on the line of rap/singing
🗣️ Poetry reading: literary cadence over minimal music
prompt: "spoken word intro, cinematic narration" / "half-sung half-spoken vocals"
🎵 Spoken word examples
🎙️ "The Revolution Will Not Be Televised" — Gil Scott-Heron 🎙️ "22 (OVER S∞∞N)" — Bon Iver (half-spoken)
🎛️

Production & Effects

The "polish" — how sounds are shaped after recording
Reverb

Space & echo

Simulates the natural echo of a room. A little = intimate. A lot = massive/cathedral.

⟿ Waveform — Reverb (decaying tail)
DRY ← REVERB TAIL DECAYS →
One note hits → room reflections bounce back, slowly fading
Presets
🚽 Bathroom reverb = small, bright
🏠 Room reverb = natural
⛪ Hall reverb = epic, grand
🌌 Infinite reverb = dreamy, ambient
prompt: "heavy reverb, cathedral sound"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "With or Without You" — U2 (guitar reverb) 🎙️ "Running Up That Hill" — Kate Bush (huge reverb)
Delay / Echo

Repetition with time

Sound repeats after a gap — like hearing your voice echo in a canyon.

⟿ Waveform — Delay (repeating, decaying copies)
DRY 1st 2nd 3rd
Each repeat is quieter — distance and decay in one visual
Visualize
🎵 →     🎵 →       🎵 →         🎵
(louder)   (quieter)  (quieter)
Think: "Where The Streets Have No Name" guitar
prompt: "tape delay on guitar, psychedelic"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Where the Streets Have No Name" — U2 🎙️ "Echoes" — Pink Floyd
Distortion

Grit & aggression

Intentionally "breaks" the sound to make it rougher, grittier, more aggressive.

⟿ Waveform — Clean vs Distorted
CLEAN DISTORTED (CLIPPED)
Clean: smooth sine peaks · Distorted: peaks clipped flat (overdriven)
Visualize
Clean: 〰️〰️〰️ (smooth wave)
Distorted: /\/\/\/\ (jagged wave)
Think: electric guitar in rock/metal
prompt: "heavy distorted guitars, metal riff"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Smells Like Teen Spirit" — Nirvana 🎙️ "Back in Black" — AC/DC
Compression

Smoothing loud/soft gaps

Makes loud parts quieter and quiet parts louder. Makes everything sound more polished and controlled.

⟿ Waveform — Uncompressed vs Compressed
UNCOMPRESSED COMPRESSED
Left: wild dynamic range · Right: peaks tamed, quiets lifted — uniform loudness
Visualize
Without: ▁▁▁▃▃▃█████▃▁▁
With:     ▂▂▂▃▃▃▅▅▅▅▃▂▂
Used on basically every modern track
prompt: "heavily compressed, punchy drums"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ Modern pop/hip-hop — punchy kick and snare 🎙️ "Billie Jean" — Michael Jackson (punchy mix)
Panning

Left or right placement

Positioning sounds in the stereo field. Instruments can come from left, right, or center.

⟿ Panning — energy shifts across the stereo field
left center right
The same signal can be placed left, center, or right in headphones
Stereo Field
👂L ←— 🥁 Guitar 🎸 Piano —→ R👂
            🎤 Vocals (Center)
Creates a 3D feeling in headphones
prompt: "wide stereo panning, spacious mix"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Bohemian Rhapsody" — Queen (dramatic panning) 🎙️ "Tomorrow Never Knows" — The Beatles
Sampling

Using existing recordings

Taking a piece of an old recording and using it in a new song. The foundation of hip-hop.

⟿ Sampling — chop, loop, repeat
same chopped phrase repeated
A small slice becomes a looped building block
Think of
🔁 That familiar loop in a rap beat
✂️ Cut · paste · flip · chop
Like remixing pieces of musical history
prompt: "soulful sample-based beat, chopped vocals"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Straight Outta Compton" — N.W.A 🎙️ "Gold Digger" — Kanye West
EQ (Equalization)

Adjusting frequencies

Boosting or cutting bass (low), mids, or treble (high). Shapes the "brightness" or "warmth" of sound.

⟿ EQ — low, mid, and high frequency balance
bass mids treble
EQ reshapes which parts of the spectrum feel strongest
Frequency map
🥁 Bass/Kick: low frequencies
🎹 Keys/Vocals: mid frequencies
🔔 Cymbals/Air: high frequencies
Use "warm" or "bright" in prompts instead
prompt: "warm lo-fi sound, boosted bass"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ Warm: vinyl-era soul, Motown 🎙️ Bright: "Since U Been Gone" — Kelly Clarkson
Dry vs Wet

Clean vs. effected signal

Most productions blend both. Crucial concept for prompting atmosphere.

Dry

Raw, unprocessed sound — close, intimate, no effects.

Wet

Soaked in reverb, delay, or other effects.

⟿ Dry signal vs Wet (reverb-soaked)
DRY WET (reverb tail)
Dry = sharp & defined · Wet = blurred with long decaying trail
Prompt language
🎤 "dry vocal, intimate, close-mic" → raw presence
🌊 "wet reverb, cavernous, spacious" → epic/ambient
🎛️ "dry mix, punchy" → modern pop/hip-hop production
prompt: "dry close-mic vocals, intimate feel"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ Dry: "Say My Name" — Destiny's Child (tight vocal) 🎙️ Wet: "Blinding Lights" — The Weeknd (reverb-soaked)
Sidechain Compression

The "pump" effect

The kick drum triggers compression on the bass or pads — every time the kick hits, other elements briefly duck in volume. Creates the iconic pumping/breathing feel of house, techno, and EDM.

⟿ Sidechain — bass ducks on every kick hit
KICK BASS (sidechained)
Every kick hit → bass volume drops (ducks) then snaps back = the pump
Where you'll hear it
🏠 House, techno, French house
📻 Daft Punk, Avicii, Swedish House Mafia
💡 Even subtle sidechain makes modern pop "breathe"
prompt: "heavy sidechain compression, pumping house beat"
🎵 Iconic pumping
🎙️ "One More Time" — Daft Punk 🎙️ "Levels" — Avicii
Lo-Fi

Intentionally imperfect

Music that sounds slightly degraded on purpose — vinyl crackle, muffled highs, tape hiss, pitch wobble. Nostalgic, cozy, human. The opposite of clean studio production.

⟿ Lo-fi waveform — noise floor + imperfect signal
noise floor
Signal plus constant noise floor — the "warmth" of imperfection
Lo-fi ingredients
📻 Vinyl crackle + dust pops
🎛️ Tape saturation + pitch wobble (wow/flutter)
🎹 Muffled highs (low-pass filter)
☕ Slow BPM, jazz chords, rain ambience
prompt: "lo-fi hip hop, vinyl crackle, muffled piano, chill"
🎵 Lo-fi touchstones
🎙️ J Dilla — "Donuts" (entire album) 🎙️ Nujabes — "Feather"
🎭

Mood & Atmosphere

The feeling words — these translate directly into Suno prompts
Anthemic

Built for crowds

Big, singalong energy. Wide, powerful sound designed to fill stadiums and unite people. Chorus hits like a wave.

⟿ Anthemic — broad, loud, crowd-sized chorus
big chorus lift
Large dynamic rise with wide, singalong impact
Ingredients
🎸 Layered guitars or synths
🥁 Powerful, wide drum sound
🎤 Group vocals / choir feel
📈 Builds and releases tension
prompt: "anthemic rock chorus, crowd singalong, stadium feel"
🎵 Anthemic classics
🎙️ "Don't Stop Me Now" — Queen 🎙️ "Mr. Brightside" — The Killers
Ethereal

Otherworldly & floating

Airy, dreamlike, barely-there. Sounds like it exists between worlds. Heavy reverb, high-register instruments, breathy vocals.

⟿ Waveform — Ethereal (soft, fading, high-register)
Soft, floaty sine — high register, amplitude fades like mist
Ingredients
🌫️ Heavy reverb + long decay
🔔 High-register instruments (bells, celeste)
💨 Breathy vocals, whisper layers
🌊 Slow pad swells underneath
prompt: "ethereal ambient, breathy vocals, bell tones, dreamy reverb"
🎵 Ethereal references
🎙️ "Teardrop" — Massive Attack 🎙️ "Breathe Me" — Sia
Brooding

Dark & slow-burning

Heavy atmosphere, tension that never fully releases. Not sad — more like something is coming. Deliberate, dark, intense.

⟿ Waveform — Brooding (low, weighted, asymmetric)
Low register, slow movement, weight skewed below midline — unresolved tension
Ingredients
🎹 Minor key, low piano or synth
🥁 Slow, heavy kick — sparse hi-hats
🌑 Little to no reverb (oppressive closeness)
🎻 Low strings, cello drones
prompt: "brooding cinematic, low strings, minor key, tense atmosphere"
🎵 Brooding references
🎙️ "Hurt" — Nine Inch Nails 🎙️ "The Funeral" — Band of Horses
Euphoric

Peak emotional uplift

Joy that almost hurts. Maximum energy + emotional release at the same time. The feeling at a festival when the drop lands perfectly.

⟿ Waveform — Euphoric (max amplitude, dense, bright)
Full amplitude, perfectly symmetric — nothing held back
Ingredients
🔆 Major key, uplifting chord progression
🎹 Bright synth leads, pad swells
🥁 4-on-the-floor kick, rising snare rolls
🎤 Soaring vocals, key change at climax
prompt: "euphoric trance, soaring synth lead, emotional peak, festival energy"
🎵 Pure euphoria
🎙️ "Sandstorm" — Darude 🎙️ "On Top of the World" — Imagine Dragons
Melancholic

Sad but beautiful

Not crushing sadness — more like beautiful longing. The feeling of missing something. Minor key but with warmth. Bittersweet.

⟿ Melancholic — slow, gentle, minor colour
Soft dynamics, downward-tending contour — bittersweet
Ingredients
🌧️ Minor key, slow tempo
🎹 Piano, acoustic guitar, soft strings
🎤 Intimate vocals, close-mic, quiet
🕯️ Sparse arrangement — space to breathe
prompt: "melancholic piano ballad, intimate vocals, bittersweet"
🎵 Melancholic touchstones
🎙️ "The Night We Met" — Lord Huron 🎙️ "Motion Picture Soundtrack" — Radiohead 🎙️ "Someone Like You" — Adele
Cinematic

Scene-setting & narrative

Music designed to make you see something. Orchestral or hybrid, builds in layers, tells a story without words. Think film trailers, game soundtracks.

⟿ Cinematic — quiet start, epic swell
epic build
Dynamics swell from intimate to massive
Ingredients
🎻 Full orchestra or hybrid (orchestra + synths)
🥁 Taiko drums, epic percussion
🌊 Swelling dynamics — quiet → massive
🎬 Clear emotional arc (tension → release)
prompt: "cinematic orchestral, epic build, emotional strings, Hans Zimmer style"
🎵 Cinematic references
🎙️ "Time" — Hans Zimmer (Inception) 🎙️ "Arrival of the Birds" — The Cinematic Orchestra
🧠

Advanced Concepts

For when you want more control
Time Signature

How beats are grouped

4/4 = 4 beats per bar (most pop). 3/4 = waltz feel. 6/8 = swinging, lilting.

⟿ 4/4 vs 3/4 — beat grouping
4/4 3/4
4/4 = four equal groups · 3/4 = three (waltz)
Feel each
4/4: ONE-two-three-four (rock, pop)
3/4: ONE-two-three (waltz, ballad)
6/8: ONE-two-three-FOUR-five-six (Irish jig)
prompt: "3/4 waltz tempo, cinematic"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ 3/4: "Nothing Else Matters" — Metallica 🎙️ 6/8: "We Are the Champions" — Queen
Modulation (Key Change)

Shifting musical "home"

Moving to a different key mid-song. Creates a lift, surprise, or emotional shift.

⟿ Modulation — step up in energy (new key)
↑ key up
Lift to a higher key = emotional peak
Think of
🚀 The song suddenly feels higher/brighter
🎢 Whitney Houston's key change in "I Will Always Love You"
✨ Instant goosebumps
prompt: "key change in final chorus, uplifting"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "I Will Always Love You" — Whitney Houston 🎙️ "Man in the Mirror" — Michael Jackson
Counterpoint

Two melodies at once

Two or more independent melodies that work together simultaneously.

Visualize
Voice 1: ↗️↘️↗️ (up-down-up)
Voice 2: ↘️↗️↘️ (down-up-down)
Together: harmonious independence
Think: Bach, fugues, madrigals
⟿ Counterpoint — two independent lines
voice 1 voice 2
Two melodies that work together independently
prompt: "two-voice counterpoint, baroque style"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ Bach fugues, inventions 🎙️ "Eleanor Rigby" — The Beatles (string counterpoint)
Pedal Point

One held note underneath

A sustained bass note while the chords change above. Creates tension and depth.

Visualize
Chords: C → Am → F → G
Bass:     E ——————————————
Creates powerful, drone-like tension
⟿ Pedal point — held bass under changing harmony
PEDAL (held) chords change
Green = fixed bass · Purple = moving chords above
prompt: "bass pedal point, dark drone, minor"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Running Up That Hill" — Kate Bush (synth pedal) 🎙️ Bach organ works
Coda

A special ending

A distinct section added to conclude a piece — different from just repeating or fading out.

Think of
🎭 The bow at the end of a play
🍷 A digestif after a meal
🎆 A grand finale
⟿ Coda — distinct ending section
CODA
Final section — resolution, not just repeat
prompt: "dramatic coda, orchestral finale"
🎵 Real examples
🎙️ "Hey Jude" — The Beatles (long coda) 🎙️ "Layla" — Eric Clapton (piano coda)