Find the right Cue.

Describe the vibe, audition directions, export tracks that fit your cut.

Better than stock music. Built for creators, editors, and teams.

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From brief to usable direction

Start with a prompt or reference, audition a few directions, then keep shaping the version that fits the cut.

Create
Explore
Library
Brief loaded
warm indie bed for a travel reel, light drums, lift at 0:20
01
Prompt
Start with the brief
Describe the mood, energy, tempo, references, and where the track has to land. Write it the same way you would brief a producer, editor, or composer.
02
Preview
Preview directions fast
Get fast first passes for reels, podcast beds, teaser cues, game scenes, and rough client comps without digging through stock libraries.
03
Shape
Shape what is working
Ask for more lift, less clutter, a tighter intro, a darker tone, or a bigger drop. Trim, extend, remix, and split stems when a section is close.
04
Save
Save the keepers
Save the strongest versions to albums, playlists, and favorites so they stay reusable across projects.
05
Export
Export what fits
When the direction lands, download the version that belongs in the cut, pitch, or client delivery. Keep the process fast from first idea to usable output.
Prompts that get you closer faster

Good prompts name the vibe, the energy, and where the music needs to work. Start there, then refine from what you hear.

Forward Motion
"A minimal tech house track at 124-128 BPM with groovy bassline, tight kick, and percussive elements."
0:001:00
Slow Burn City
"A modern lo-fi hip-hop track 78-82 BPM. Warm vinyl crackle, dusty boom bap drums with soft swing, deep sub bass."
0:001:00
After the Count
"An energetic jazz ensemble at 110-130 BPM with piano, upright bass, drums, and brass section."
0:001:00
The Ascent
"A melodic EDM track at 126-130 BPM with uplifting chord progressions, bright lead synth, and emotional build-ups."
0:001:00
Start free. Scale up when projects get serious.

Try the workflow first. Upgrade when you need reference uploads, deeper shaping tools, better exports, and commercial-use rights.

Free
$0
Best for testing briefs and exploring directions.
  • Prompt a track from a written brief
  • Preview directions for a reel, podcast, or cut
  • Save favorites and promising ideas
  • MP3 export for rough internal use
  • Non-commercial use
Join waitlist
Popular
Pro
$19/mo
For creators who need a dependable music buddy on real projects.
  • Use text, uploads, or recordings as starting points
  • Trim, extend, remix, and split stems
  • Keep versions organized across albums and playlists
  • Export higher-quality files for delivery
  • Commercial-use rights
Join Pro waitlist
Studio
Custom
For teams running repeat production across multiple projects.
  • Everything in Pro
  • Shared workflows across multiple briefs
  • API access where it fits the stack
  • Priority onboarding and support
  • Setup for repeat production use
A few things creators ask first

Quick answers for creators comparing Music Buddy with stock libraries, full DAW sessions, and endless scrolling hoping something fits.

Start with the feeling, style, pacing, and where the music has to work. For example: "warm indie background track for a travel reel, light drums, small lift at 20 seconds."
Paid plans include commercial-use rights. Free access is for evaluation and internal testing until you upgrade. Full terms should be linked from the usage summary and terms page.
Both, but the sweet spot is speed to direction. Use Music Buddy to get to a strong draft fast, then keep shaping it until it fits the reel, video, podcast, scene, or client brief.
Yes. The workflow includes uploads, recordings, remix, generate-similar, and selection-based context, so you can build from material you already have instead of always starting from zero.
Stock libraries ask you to hunt for something close enough. Music Buddy starts with your brief, so the first pass already knows the mood, pacing, and job the music needs to do.
No. You can talk to it in plain language. If you are a producer, it works as a fast sketch tool. If you are a creator or marketer, it gives you a practical way to reach a usable direction without living in a full DAW workflow.
You can visit the studio today, but account creation and sign-in are opening gradually through early access.
Save them to albums, playlists, or favorites, reopen them in the studio, and export the version that earns its place in the project. The point is to keep momentum, not lose the best take.