I've been using AI music tools for real projects —
turning poetry into songs, building soundscapes for movement events,
experimenting with different prompts and expressive styles. These are not
reviews from a tech blog. These are notes from the field, from someone who
actually cares about what comes out the other end.
1.
Suno à suno.com à The gold standard
Flow → text prompt → full song with vocals in 30 seconds
Still the one you start with. Type a description — genre,
mood, language, lyric fragment — and Suno builds a complete song:
instrumentation, arrangement, lead vocal, backing voices. The v5 model is a
significant leap: lyrics actually fit the rhythm now, and the mix holds
together across the whole track. Suno Studio is a genuine game-changer — edit sections,
remix, extend in 30-second blocks, export up to 12 stems separately for use in
any DAW. I've used it to adapt wartime poetry into songs. The model handles
Russian and Ukrainian lyrics with real musical sensitivity, not just phonetic
approximation. Free plan is generous. Pro at $8/month. Full features at $24.
BEST FOR → Full songs from poetry or lyrics. The fastest
path from text to something a human might actually want to listen to.
2.
Udio à udio.com à The craftsman's tool
Flow → prompt → iterate → refine → something surprising
Built by former Google DeepMind researchers, and it
shows. Udio is not for people who want one-shot results — it's for people who
want to sculpt. You generate, then steer. Add new prompts. Pull the song in a
different direction without throwing it away. The instrumentals are exceptional
— arrangement clarity, stereo field, low-end depth. The "Playground"
tool for mixing voices and styles is genuinely fun to disappear into for an
hour. Note: Udio settled with Universal Music Group in October 2025, which
matters for commercial use rights. Temporarily disabled stem downloads during
the licensing transition — worth checking their current status before
committing to a paid plan.
BEST FOR → Experimental projects where you want the AI to
surprise you. Klezmer, world music hybrids, anything where genre-blending is
the point.
3.
AIVA à aiva.ai à The composer
Flow → mood + instrumentation → cinematic scored music
AIVA thinks in themes, not tracks. It was trained on
classical and orchestral repertoire, and it shows — what it produces feels
composed, not generated. Where Suno gives you a song, AIVA gives you a cue:
something that could underscore a scene, a ceremony, a poem reading, a movement
sequence. For creating music to accompany video content — wartime poems set to
images, YouTube essays, event atmosphere — AIVA produces output that sounds
like it had a human composer behind it. Not for pop, not for vocals. For
anything that needs gravity, presence, and musical structure across time.
BEST FOR → Background for video poetry, documentary
underscore, FireLight-style event atmospheres. Music that serves something
else.
4.
Mubert à mubert.com à The content creator's
tool
Flow → mood/energy → royalty-free continuous track,
instantly
Mubert doesn't ask you to think in chord progressions. It
asks you to think in moods: "tense but not aggressive," "lo-fi
focus," "warm and communal." That is how content creators
actually work, and Mubert is the only tool on this list built around that insight.
Instant generation, clean licensing (genuinely usable on monetized YouTube),
and mood-to-music logic that actually holds. For anyone producing a lot of
YouTube content — festival clips, dance videos, photo essays — Mubert solves
the "I need music that doesn't get me flagged" problem quietly and
consistently.
BEST FOR → YouTube background music, live event
atmosphere, content creation workflows. The tool you set and forget.
5.
ElevenLabs Music à elevenlabs.io à The voice-forward
newcomer
Flow → voice cloning + music → songs in someone's actual
voice
ElevenLabs built the best AI voice technology on the
market, and they've now crossed it with music generation. The result: you can
produce songs that don't just have a voice — they have your voice, or a specific
voice you're working with. Voice cloning and isolation tools are included. For
turning a poet's voice into a sung version of their own poem, this is the only
tool that even attempts the problem. The trim and cut features work inside the
generation window itself. Credits cost more than Suno per output, and the song
structure can feel awkward — but when you need the voice to be personal rather
than generic, nothing else comes close. Their licensing is among the cleanest
in the industry — fully copyright-cleared training data.
BEST FOR → Adapting a specific poet's voice into sung
form. Memorial projects, personal songs, any work where identity of the voice
matters.
The era of "I can't make music" is over. You
still need taste, intention, and something worth saying. The tools just removed
the excuse of not knowing how to play an instrument. That part was always the
smaller barrier anyway.
