Prompt Maestro - AI Music Prompt Generator for Suno & Udio
Create detailed AI music prompts with genre recipes, instrument layers, mix settings, and style modifiers. Free to use, no account required.
Prompt Maestro supports both Suno and Udio - the two leading AI music generation platforms. Suno mode outputs concise comma-separated tags. Udio mode outputs natural-language descriptions. Toggle between them freely.
Features
- Genre & sub-genre selection across Electronic, Hip Hop, Rock, Jazz, Classical, Folk, and more
- Instrument layering - Lead, Backing, and Atmosphere slots with drums, bass, keys, synths, strings, winds, and world instruments
- Mix & audio production settings - BPM, key, scale, reverb, delay, EQ, and production techniques
- Combination styles for mood, era, and aesthetic context
- Save & load custom presets with built-in starter presets
- Works on desktop and mobile with full keyboard accessibility
How to Create AI Music Prompts - FAQ
- How do I create Suno prompts with Prompt Maestro?
- Select a genre and sub-genre, layer instruments across Lead, Backing, and Atmosphere slots, fine-tune with BPM, key, and mix settings, then copy the comma-separated prompt that Suno understands natively.
- How do I create Udio prompts?
- Switch to Udio mode using the toggle. Prompt Maestro automatically reformats your selections into natural-language descriptions that Udio responds best to.
- What is the difference between Suno and Udio prompt formats?
- Suno works best with concise, comma-separated tags. Udio prefers natural language descriptions. Prompt Maestro handles this automatically.
- Is Prompt Maestro free to use?
- Yes, completely free with no account required. All features are available at no cost.
- What genres and instruments are available?
- Electronic & Dance, Hip Hop & R&B, Rock & Metal, Jazz & Blues, Classical & Cinematic, Folk & Country, and more. Instruments include drums, bass, keys, synths, strings, winds, world instruments, FX, and vocal types.
- Do I need music production experience?
- Not at all. Start with a built-in preset and every control has a tooltip explaining what it does in plain language.