How does text-to-music generation work and what controls do I have over style and structure?
You provide a natural-language prompt describing mood, instruments, tempo, key, and structure. The system maps those descriptors to musical elements (melody, harmony, rhythm) and produces both audio and machine-readable files. Controls let you specify length, loop points, export type (MIDI, stems, WAV), and iterative edits such as mixing adjustments or arrangement changes.
What file formats can I export and how do they integrate with DAWs?
Common exports include MIDI (note data for each instrument), stereo stems (grouped audio tracks), and rendered audio (WAV/MP3). MIDI imports into Ableton, Logic, FL Studio, and other DAWs for deep editing. Stems and WAV files are ready for mixing or quick publishing. You can request bar markers and loop points to simplify tempo-matching and middleware integration.
Who owns the music created from my prompts and what are common licensing considerations?
Ownership and licensing depend on the generator’s terms of service. Many platforms grant users rights to use and commercialize outputs, but details vary—check the platform’s license for restrictions on redistribution, attribution, or derivative works. For client or commercial projects, document usage rights and consult legal counsel if you need explicit guarantees.
Can I create loopable cues or short stingers for games and interactive media?
Yes. Use templates or prompt instructions that request specific bar counts, loop points, and resolving patterns (for example, an 8-bar loop that resolves every 4 bars). Request bar markers and separate stems to simplify integration with game audio middleware and adaptive layering systems.
How do I guide the generator to match a specific tempo, key, or instrumentation?
Include explicit parameters in your prompt: state tempo (e.g., “95 BPM”), key (e.g., “E minor”), and instrument palette (e.g., “electric piano, soft strings, low synth bass”). For best results, combine those with a short reference to mood or style and a target length or bar count.
Is there a way to convert lyrics or a melody line into full accompaniment?
Yes. Provide the lyric or sung melody line and ask for a harmonic structure and accompaniment. Prompt examples such as “Given the lyric line ‘we're running toward the light,’ produce a simple vocal melody and chord progression in C major” yield a basic prototypical arrangement you can export as MIDI and refine in your DAW.
How do I refine outputs if the first result isn't the right mood or arrangement?
Refine iteratively: make targeted requests (e.g., “reduce reverb on the vocal line,” “make the bass more present,” or “add a counter-melody in the bridge”). Lock parts you like and re-generate only sections you want to change. Also try swapping templates or adjusting tempo/key to explore variations quickly.
Are there templates or presets for common use cases like podcasts, ads, or film scoring?
Yes. Templates are available for film cues, loopable game music, podcast beds, commercials, and song sketches. Each template presets length, instrumentation, and export defaults so you can produce usable assets faster.