Went straight to my work playlist. Something about it. Just works so well.First new song in a couple of weeks.
Threw in some deep house, I love deep bass overall
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Went straight to my work playlist. Something about it. Just works so well.First new song in a couple of weeks.
Threw in some deep house, I love deep bass overall
Yeah it has a catchy beat,. A huge problem I have with south african house, they like looping the beat to death, and rarely if ever builds, or break down beats.Went straight to my work playlist. Something about it. Just works so well.
Nice. Also the video editing works greatTried a few new things. Recorded some new vocal samples for the doo-wop style, then did a few passes and a mash-up to get the hybrid 50s / alternative rock metal blend.
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Can’t take much credit for the video other than the idea, thats Google Omni in the Gemini app… I gave it a prompt and it did the rest.Nice. Also the video editing works great
Sometimes experimental stuff truly the best. Found them to age better also.This one turned out ridiculously catchy and it was highly experimental
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I tweaked this utility quite a bit and have found it to be quite effective, for my purposes at least. I uploaded it to Github today, if anyone is interested in using something like this to create more mash-ups, delve into other genres, do experimental stuff and whatever. This is a summary of what the tool does.I made a Suno Style Mishmasher utility, which essentially has different degrees of mixing styles, instruments, styles, eras, textures, moods and so on into randomised prompts to play with to discover new tricks in Suno... I'll polish it a bit more and share it if there's interest in anyone else wanting to use it.
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Will check it out this weekend. Saved all the stuff you and wizard supplemented.I tweaked this utility quite a bit and have found it to be quite effective, for my purposes at least. I uploaded it to Github today, if anyone is interested in using something like this to create more mash-ups, delve into other genres, do experimental stuff and whatever. This is a summary of what the tool does.
The basic idea is simple: it helps generate short Suno-friendly style prompts by mixing genres, instruments, moods, production notes, vocal styles, eras, and playing directions.
It can do proper chaotic randomisation, but I also added a more controlled “association” system. So instead of just throwing accordion, theremin, blast beats and amapiano into every prompt for no reason, you can define a base style like industrial metal, grunge rock, dark ambient, cinematic orchestral, etc, and the app will favour things that actually make sense for that style.
Some of the features:
base prompt expansion, for example starting with “grunge rock with cinematic atmosphere”
base style associations
blending multiple base styles
cohesion and weirdness controls
chaos mode for completely ridiculous combinations
import packs for adding multiple styles/associations at once
bulk import for genres, instruments, moods, production notes, etc
external JSON database
MIT licensed / open source
It’s built in Python with PySide6, so it’s not some polished commercial thing, but it works and it’s been useful for exploring styles I probably wouldn’t have thought of manually.
The goal isn’t music theory accuracy. It’s more of a creative prompt exploration tool for Suno.
GitHub:
https://github.com/FLi79Za/SunoMishMasher
Would be curious to hear if anyone else finds it useful, or has ideas for better style packs / association packs.
I tweaked this utility quite a bit and have found it to be quite effective, for my purposes at least. I uploaded it to Github today, if anyone is interested in using something like this to create more mash-ups, delve into other genres, do experimental stuff and whatever. This is a summary of what the tool does.
The basic idea is simple: it helps generate short Suno-friendly style prompts by mixing genres, instruments, moods, production notes, vocal styles, eras, and playing directions.
It can do proper chaotic randomisation, but I also added a more controlled “association” system. So instead of just throwing accordion, theremin, blast beats and amapiano into every prompt for no reason, you can define a base style like industrial metal, grunge rock, dark ambient, cinematic orchestral, etc, and the app will favour things that actually make sense for that style.
Some of the features:
base prompt expansion, for example starting with “grunge rock with cinematic atmosphere”
base style associations
blending multiple base styles
cohesion and weirdness controls
chaos mode for completely ridiculous combinations
import packs for adding multiple styles/associations at once
bulk import for genres, instruments, moods, production notes, etc
external JSON database
MIT licensed / open source
It’s built in Python with PySide6, so it’s not some polished commercial thing, but it works and it’s been useful for exploring styles I probably wouldn’t have thought of manually.
The goal isn’t music theory accuracy. It’s more of a creative prompt exploration tool for Suno.
GitHub:
https://github.com/FLi79Za/SunoMishMasher
Would be curious to hear if anyone else finds it useful, or has ideas for better style packs / association packs.