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Prompt Examples

AI Song Prompt Examples

Browse focused AI song prompt examples for gifts, creator content, genre ideas, instrumentals, and quick edits you can adapt for MemoTune.

Formula

Genre + mood + voice

Library

12 style families

Examples

10 copy-ready prompts

Personalized songs

Prompts for gifts and personal moments

Personal prompts work best when they name the relationship, occasion, emotional arc, and a few story details that should appear in the lyrics. A birthday song, apology song, wedding surprise, or graduation song should not sound like a generic greeting card. Include the person, the memory, the tone, and the kind of chorus you want. The prompt can stay short, but the details should feel specific enough that the song could only belong to that situation.

  • Birthday song for a friend
  • Anniversary song for a partner
  • Apology song after an argument
  • Proposal or wedding surprise

Creator use

Prompts for videos, podcasts, ads, and social content

Creator prompts should describe how the music will be used. A podcast intro, short-form background, or ad hook needs a different structure from a full emotional song. Mention duration, loop behavior, whether vocals should be absent, how the ending should land, and what emotion the viewer should feel. A ten-second intro can be more successful than a full song if the prompt is built around the edit.

Instrumental

Prompts for background music without vocals

Instrumental prompts should emphasize instruments, tempo, loop behavior, mood, and usage. Say no vocals when the track should stay behind voiceover or visuals. For background music, the listener should understand the scene without being distracted by lyrics. Use words like sparse, warm, pulsing, airy, playful, suspenseful, meditative, or polished, then connect the mood to instruments and dynamics.

Genre swaps

Turn one idea into multiple styles

A strong song idea can travel across styles. “A song about leaving home” could become an acoustic folk ballad, a synth-pop road anthem, a cinematic trailer cue, or a spoken-word ambient piece. Keep the story constant and change only the style package. This helps you learn which genres fit the same theme and gives you several directions before choosing a final version.

  • Same story, different genre
  • Same chorus, different vocal delivery
  • Same mood, different instruments
  • Same use case, different tempo

Why examples work

Read examples as ingredient lists

Each example below has a job. The title tells you the use case. The prompt names the musical result, style, mood, instruments, vocals, and limits. The note explains what to change. You can copy an example, but it is better to replace the occasion, story, voice, tempo, and avoid instruction so MemoTune receives a prompt that belongs to your project.

Style references

Describe traits instead of copying artist names

When you want a familiar direction, describe the musical traits rather than leaning on celebrity names. Use phrases like retro synthwave, intimate acoustic storytelling, glossy dance pop, sparse dark pop, conscious jazz rap, or powerhouse soul vocal. Trait-based prompts are clearer, safer for original work, and easier to combine with your own story details.

Adaptation method

Remix examples by changing one layer

The fastest way to use an example is to keep its skeleton and replace one layer at a time. Change the use case first, then the genre, then the vocal direction, then the production limit. For instance, a podcast intro can become a product logo sting by changing the duration and ending. A birthday folk prompt can become a graduation pop prompt by changing the occasion, story images, and chorus emotion. This method gives you original prompts without starting from a blank page.

Genre and style lists

Prompt-ready genre families

Use one primary family, add one sub-style, then connect it to mood, instruments, vocals, tempo, and production notes. These lists are starting points for clear prompts, not rules.

Pop and melodic songwriting

Use these styles when the song needs a clear hook, approachable vocals, and a structure that feels easy to remember. Pop prompts benefit from a mood, a chorus goal, and one production clue such as acoustic guitar, retro synths, or claps.

PopDance PopIndie PopSynth PopPop RockAcoustic PopTeen PopDream PopChill PopK-Pop Inspired PopJ-Pop Inspired PopBubblegum Pop

Rock, punk, and guitar-driven energy

Choose a rock family when guitars, drums, attitude, and live-band motion matter more than polished electronic texture. Add energy words such as driving, gritty, anthemic, raw, stadium-sized, or intimate garage rehearsal.

Classic RockHard RockAlternative RockIndie RockPost-RockPunk RockPop PunkGarage RockBlues RockGlam RockProgressive RockSoft Rock

Hip hop, rap, trap, and rhythmic storytelling

Use hip hop styles when flow, cadence, drums, bass, and lyrical attitude carry the song. Prompts should describe delivery speed, beat character, vocal tone, and whether the chorus should be sung, chanted, or spoken.

Hip HopRapBoom BapTrapMelodic RapConscious RapLo-fi RapSouthern Hip HopAlternative Hip HopDrillCrunkJazz Rap

Electronic, dance, and club production

Electronic prompts work best when they include tempo, bass movement, synth texture, drop behavior, and room energy. Use these for workout tracks, festival intros, creator hooks, or instrumental background loops.

EDMHouseTechnoTranceDubstepDrum and BassBreakbeatElectroDiscoSynthwaveVaporwaveIDM

Jazz, soul, R&B, funk, and groove

These styles are useful when the song needs warmth, swing, rich chords, expressive vocals, or a human groove. Add instrument cues such as upright bass, brushed drums, Rhodes keys, saxophone, horn section, or finger snaps.

JazzSmooth JazzBebopLatin JazzSoulR&BNeo SoulFunkDisco FunkGospel SoulBluesNu Jazz

Folk, country, acoustic, and storytelling

Use acoustic styles for personal songs, gift songs, reflective lyrics, and intimate stories. These prompts should include relationship, place, memory, vocal delivery, and a simple arrangement such as guitar, banjo, piano, or hand percussion.

FolkCountryBluegrassCountry PopCountry RockSinger-SongwriterAcoustic BalladAmericanaIndie FolkStory FolkSoft AcousticCampfire Song

Cinematic, orchestral, and game soundtrack

Use soundtrack language when the music supports a scene rather than a radio single. Name the setting, emotional arc, instrumentation, pacing, and ending behavior so the track fits trailers, games, short films, or presentations.

Cinematic ScoreOrchestralEpic TrailerFantasy AdventureSpy ThrillerDark MysteryComedy BackgroundGame LoopAmbient SoundtrackHybrid OrchestraPiano ScoreMinimal Underscore

Ambient, lo-fi, new age, and relaxed focus

Use these styles when the listener should study, relax, meditate, or stay inside a gentle atmosphere. Prompts should avoid crowded vocals and focus on texture, repetition, softness, loop behavior, and emotional temperature.

AmbientLo-fiDowntempoNew AgeMeditativeDreamy PadsMinimal PianoChillhopStudy BeatSparse ElectronicEthereal TextureSoft Drone

Latin, reggae, Afrobeats, and global rhythm

Regional rhythm prompts need clear percussion and dance context. Add language, groove, drum pattern, celebration level, and whether the song should feel traditional, modern, romantic, beach-friendly, or club-ready.

Latin PopBossa NovaSalsaTangoReggaetonReggaeDancehallDubAfrobeatAfro PopCumbiaWorld Fusion

Metal, dark, aggressive, and dramatic styles

Use heavier styles when the track needs force, tension, and contrast. Specify clean or harsh vocals, riff density, drum intensity, mood, and whether the chorus should open into melody or stay dark and compressed.

Heavy MetalPower MetalBlack MetalDeath MetalMetalcoreNu MetalIndustrial MetalDoomDark RockGothic RockAggressive TrailerSinister Electronic

Theatrical, lyrical, spoken, and character-led songs

These styles help when the song needs narration, dialogue, cabaret energy, character perspective, or a clear story arc. Separate spoken lines from sung hooks and describe the performance style instead of relying on a single broad genre.

BroadwayCabaretLoungeOperatic PopSpoken WordNarration IntroStorytelling BalladDuet SceneChoir MomentTorch SongTheatrical PopCharacter Song

Experimental, hybrid, and texture-first ideas

Use hybrid language when a normal genre label is too narrow. Combine one familiar anchor with one unusual texture, but keep the prompt readable: genre, mood, instrumentation, tempo, and one surprising sound design detail.

Experimental PopElectroacousticNoise TextureIndustrialPsychedelicArt PopGlitchFolktronicaDark AmbientPost-PunkNew WaveHybrid Cinematic Trap

Examples

Prompt examples you can adapt

Treat each card as a starting point. Copy it, replace the story details, then send it into AI Song Maker when the direction feels close.

Birthday gift

Use names and story details when the song is meant to feel personal.

Joyful acoustic pop birthday song for my sister Maya, warm female vocals, clapping rhythm, lyrics about road trips, bad jokes, and always showing up, bright chorus.

Podcast intro

Short creator prompts should mention duration and ending behavior.

Ten-second upbeat podcast intro, modern funk bass, crisp drums, bright synth stabs, confident energy, no vocals, clean ending for voiceover.

Cinematic instrumental

Instrumental examples work best when they name the content context.

Cinematic orchestral instrumental for a product launch video, pulsing strings, hopeful brass, steady 100 BPM build, inspiring but not dramatic, no choir.

Graduation memory

Occasion, imagery, and structure make the prompt usable for a specific milestone.

Uplifting pop ballad for a graduation video, warm group vocals, piano opening, lyrics about late nights, small wins, and stepping into the unknown, big final chorus.

Short ad hook

Ad prompts should emphasize duration and ending shape.

Eight-second bright electro-pop ad hook, punchy synth bass, hand claps, no vocals, quick rise into a clean logo-style ending.

Fantasy game loop

Game loops need a repeat instruction so the music does not feel like a full single.

Seamless fantasy village game loop, soft lute, hand drum, warm flute melody, peaceful morning atmosphere, no vocals, gentle repeat point.

Late-night R&B

The scene gives emotional tension without over-explaining the lyrics.

Slow R&B song, smoky female vocal, Rhodes keyboard, deep bass, lyrics about deciding whether to answer a midnight text, intimate but controlled.

High-energy workout

Fitness prompts should prioritize tempo, repetition, and energy.

Fast EDM workout track, 132 BPM, driving kick, aggressive synth bass, short vocal chants, rising drops, confident and clean production.

Kids-friendly jingle

A child-safe prompt should specify tone, simplicity, and subject.

Playful kid-friendly jingle, ukulele, xylophone, claps, simple melody, cheerful group vocals, lyrics about brushing teeth before bedtime.

Minimal spoken intro

Use this pattern when spoken setup matters before the sung hook.

Minimal piano pop song with a spoken-word intro, calm narrator voice, soft strings entering after the first line, chorus about forgiving yourself.

Related guides

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FAQ

Common prompt questions

Can I copy these AI song prompt examples directly?

Yes, but replace the occasion, names, mood, instruments, and story details so the prompt matches your real song idea.

Why are the examples grouped by use case?

Use case changes the prompt. A gift song needs story details, while creator background music needs duration, loop behavior, and no-vocal instructions.

Do examples work for both quick prompt and own lyrics mode?

Most examples work in quick prompt mode. If you already have lyrics, move the lyric text to own lyrics mode and use the prompt as the style direction.

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