290 lines
10 KiB
Markdown
290 lines
10 KiB
Markdown
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---
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name: songwriting-and-ai-music
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description: >
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Songwriting craft, AI music generation prompts (Suno focus), parody/adaptation
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techniques, phonetic tricks, and lessons learned. These are tools and ideas,
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not rules. Break any of them when the art calls for it.
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tags: [songwriting, music, suno, parody, lyrics, creative]
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triggers:
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- writing a song
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- song lyrics
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- music prompt
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- suno prompt
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- parody song
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- adapting a song
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- AI music generation
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---
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# Songwriting & AI Music Generation
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Everything here is a GUIDELINE, not a rule. Art breaks rules on purpose.
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Use what serves the song. Ignore what doesn't.
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---
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## 1. Song Structure (Pick One or Invent Your Own)
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Common skeletons — mix, modify, or throw out as needed:
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```
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ABABCB Verse/Chorus/Verse/Chorus/Bridge/Chorus (most pop/rock)
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AABA Verse/Verse/Bridge/Verse (refrain-based) (jazz standards, ballads)
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ABAB Verse/Chorus alternating (simple, direct)
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AAA Verse/Verse/Verse (strophic, no chorus) (folk, storytelling)
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```
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The six building blocks:
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- Intro — set the mood, pull the listener in
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- Verse — the story, the details, the world-building
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- Pre-Chorus — optional tension ramp before the payoff
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- Chorus — the emotional core, the part people remember
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- Bridge — a detour, a shift in perspective or key
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- Outro — the farewell, can echo or subvert the rest
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You don't need all of these. Some great songs are just one section
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that evolves. Structure serves the emotion, not the other way around.
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---
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## 2. Rhyme, Meter, and Sound
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RHYME TYPES (from tight to loose):
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- Perfect: lean/mean
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- Family: crate/braid
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- Assonance: had/glass (same vowels, different endings)
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- Consonance: scene/when (different vowels, similar endings)
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- Near/slant: enough to suggest connection without locking it down
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Mix them. All perfect rhymes can sound like a nursery rhyme.
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All slant rhymes can sound lazy. The blend is where it lives.
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INTERNAL RHYME: Rhyming within a line, not just at the ends.
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"We pruned the lies from bleeding trees / Distilled the storm
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from entropy" — "lies/flies," "trees/entropy" create internal echoes.
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METER: The rhythm of stressed vs unstressed syllables.
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- Matching syllable counts between parallel lines helps singability
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- The STRESSED syllables matter more than total count
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- Say it out loud. If you stumble, the meter needs work.
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- Intentionally breaking meter can create emphasis or surprise
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---
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## 3. Emotional Arc and Dynamics
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Think of a song as a journey, not a flat road.
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ENERGY MAPPING (rough idea, not prescription):
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Intro: 2-3 | Verse: 5-6 | Pre-Chorus: 7
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Chorus: 8-9 | Bridge: varies | Final Chorus: 9-10
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The most powerful dynamic trick: CONTRAST.
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- Whisper before a scream hits harder than just screaming
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- Sparse before dense. Slow before fast. Low before high.
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- The drop only works because of the buildup
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- Silence is an instrument
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"Whisper to roar to whisper" — start intimate, build to full power,
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strip back to vulnerability. Works for ballads, epics, anthems.
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---
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## 4. Writing Lyrics That Work
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SHOW, DON'T TELL (usually):
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- "I was sad" = flat
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- "Your hoodie's still on the hook by the door" = alive
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- But sometimes "I give my life" said plainly IS the power
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THE HOOK:
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- The line people remember, hum, repeat
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- Usually the title or core phrase
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- Works best when melody + lyric + emotion all align
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- Place it where it lands hardest (often first/last line of chorus)
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PROSODY — lyrics and music supporting each other:
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- Stable feelings (resolution, peace) pair with settled melodies,
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perfect rhymes, resolved chords
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- Unstable feelings (longing, doubt) pair with wandering melodies,
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near-rhymes, unresolved chords
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- Verse melody typically sits lower, chorus goes higher
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- But flip this if it serves the song
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AVOID (unless you're doing it on purpose):
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- Cliches on autopilot ("heart of gold" without earning it)
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- Forcing word order to hit a rhyme ("Yoda-speak")
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- Same energy in every section (flat dynamics)
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- Treating your first draft as sacred — revision is creation
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---
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## 5. Parody and Adaptation
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When rewriting an existing song with new lyrics:
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THE SKELETON: Map the original's structure first.
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- Count syllables per line
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- Mark the rhyme scheme (ABAB, AABB, etc.)
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- Identify which syllables are STRESSED
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- Note where held/sustained notes fall
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FITTING NEW WORDS:
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- Match stressed syllables to the same beats as the original
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- Total syllable count can flex by 1-2 unstressed syllables
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- On long held notes, try to match the VOWEL SOUND of the original
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(if original holds "LOOOVE" with an "oo" vowel, "FOOOD" fits
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better than "LIFE")
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- Monosyllabic swaps in key spots keep rhythm intact
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(Crime -> Code, Snake -> Noose)
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- Sing your new words over the original — if you stumble, revise
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CONCEPT:
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- Pick a concept strong enough to sustain the whole song
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- Start from the title/hook and build outward
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- Generate lots of raw material (puns, phrases, images) FIRST,
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then fit the best ones into the structure
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- If you need a specific line somewhere, reverse-engineer the
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rhyme scheme backward to set it up
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KEEP SOME ORIGINALS: Leaving a few original lines or structures
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intact adds recognizability and lets the audience feel the connection.
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---
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## 6. Suno AI Prompt Engineering
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### Style/Genre Description Field
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FORMULA (adapt as needed):
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Genre + Mood + Era + Instruments + Vocal Style + Production + Dynamics
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```
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BAD: "sad rock song"
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GOOD: "Cinematic orchestral spy thriller, 1960s Cold War era, smoky
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sultry female vocalist, big band jazz, brass section with
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trumpets and french horns, sweeping strings, minor key,
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vintage analog warmth"
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```
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DESCRIBE THE JOURNEY, not just the genre:
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```
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"Begins as a haunting whisper over sparse piano. Gradually layers
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in muted brass. Builds through the chorus with full orchestra.
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Second verse erupts with raw belting intensity. Outro strips back
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to a lone piano and a fragile whisper fading to silence."
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```
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TIPS:
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- V4.5+ supports up to 1,000 chars in Style field — use them
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- NO artist names or trademarks. Describe the sound instead.
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"1960s Cold War spy thriller brass" not "James Bond style"
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"90s grunge" not "Nirvana-style"
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- Specify BPM and key when you have a preference
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- Use Exclude Styles field for what you DON'T want
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- Unexpected genre combos can be gold: "bossa nova trap",
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"Appalachian gothic", "chiptune jazz"
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- Build a vocal PERSONA, not just a gender:
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"A weathered torch singer with a smoky alto, slight rasp,
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who starts vulnerable and builds to devastating power"
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### Metatags (place in [brackets] inside lyrics field)
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STRUCTURE:
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[Intro] [Verse] [Verse 1] [Pre-Chorus] [Chorus]
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[Post-Chorus] [Hook] [Bridge] [Interlude]
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[Instrumental] [Instrumental Break] [Guitar Solo]
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[Breakdown] [Build-up] [Outro] [Silence] [End]
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VOCAL PERFORMANCE:
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[Whispered] [Spoken Word] [Belted] [Falsetto] [Powerful]
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[Soulful] [Raspy] [Breathy] [Smooth] [Gritty]
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[Staccato] [Legato] [Vibrato] [Melismatic]
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[Harmonies] [Choir] [Harmonized Chorus]
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DYNAMICS:
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[High Energy] [Low Energy] [Building Energy] [Explosive]
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[Emotional Climax] [Gradual swell] [Orchestral swell]
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[Quiet arrangement] [Falling tension] [Slow Down]
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GENDER:
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[Female Vocals] [Male Vocals]
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ATMOSPHERE:
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[Melancholic] [Euphoric] [Nostalgic] [Aggressive]
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[Dreamy] [Intimate] [Dark Atmosphere]
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SFX:
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[Vinyl Crackle] [Rain] [Applause] [Static] [Thunder]
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Put tags in BOTH style field AND lyrics for reinforcement.
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Keep to 5-8 tags per section max — too many confuses the AI.
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Don't contradict yourself ([Calm] + [Aggressive] in same section).
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### Custom Mode
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- Always use Custom Mode for serious work (separate Style + Lyrics)
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- Lyrics field limit: ~3,000 chars (~40-60 lines)
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- Always add structural tags — without them Suno defaults to
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flat verse/chorus/verse with no emotional arc
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---
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## 7. Phonetic Tricks for AI Singers
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AI vocalists don't read — they pronounce. Help them:
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PHONETIC RESPELLING:
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- Spell words as they SOUND: "through" -> "thru"
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- Proper nouns are highest failure rate — test early
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- "Nous" -> "Noose" (forces correct pronunciation)
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- Hyphenate to guide syllables: "Re-search", "bio-engineering"
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DELIVERY CONTROL:
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- ALL CAPS = louder, more intense
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- Vowel extension: "lo-o-o-ove" = sustained/melisma
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- Ellipses: "I... need... you" = dramatic pauses
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- Hyphenated stretch: "ne-e-ed" = emotional stretch
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ALWAYS:
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- Spell out numbers: "24/7" -> "twenty four seven"
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- Space acronyms: "AI" -> "A I" or "A-I"
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- Test proper nouns/unusual words in a short 30-second clip first
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- Once generated, pronunciation is baked in — fix in lyrics BEFORE
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---
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## 8. Workflow
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1. Write the concept/hook first — what's the emotional core?
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2. If adapting, map the original structure (syllables, rhyme, stress)
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3. Generate raw material — brainstorm freely before structuring
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4. Draft lyrics into the structure
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5. Read/sing aloud — catch stumbles, fix meter
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6. Build the Suno style description — paint the dynamic journey
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7. Add metatags to lyrics for performance direction
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8. Generate 3-5 variations minimum — treat them like recording takes
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9. Pick the best, use Extend/Continue to build on promising sections
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10. If something great happens by accident, keep it
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EXPECT: ~3-5 generations per 1 good result. Revision is normal.
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Style can drift in extensions — restate genre/mood when extending.
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---
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## 9. Lessons Learned
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- Describing the dynamic ARC in the style field matters way more
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than just listing genres. "Whisper to roar to whisper" gives
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Suno a performance map.
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- Keeping some original lines intact in a parody adds recognizability
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and emotional weight — the audience feels the ghost of the original.
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- The bridge slot in a song is where you can transform imagery.
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Swap the original's specific references for your theme's metaphors
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while keeping the emotional function (reflection, shift, revelation).
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- Monosyllabic word swaps in hooks/tags are the cleanest way to
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maintain rhythm while changing meaning.
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- A strong vocal persona description in the style field makes a
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bigger difference than any single metatag.
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- Don't be precious about rules. If a line breaks meter but hits
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harder, keep it. The feeling is what matters. Craft serves art,
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not the other way around.
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