Full-song MP3
Text-to-music prompts
Optional custom lyrics
Commercial rights included
How it works

From prompt to finished track

1

Describe the track

One sentence is enough — genre, mood, tempo, instruments. Start from the Bluegrass prompts above or write your own.

2

Generate and iterate

The AI composes an original track from scratch — no samples. Regenerate variations until one fits, or tweak the prompt and lyrics.

3

Download the MP3

Grab the full song as an MP3 with commercial rights included, ready for videos, streams and playlists.

Styles

Bluegrass styles you can generate

Pick a vibe and let the AI compose. Every track is original — no samples, no copyright headaches.

Traditional Bluegrass

Bill Monroe and Flatt & Scruggs at 130 BPM, Scruggs-style banjo rolls, fiddle and mandolin trading leads, high-lonesome tenor vocal. Appalachian 1940s blueprint.

Newgrass

New Grass Revival and Béla Fleck at 120 BPM, jazz-influenced harmony, extended improvisation, virtuoso instrumental technique. Progressive 80s-90s sound.

Old-Time Mountain

Pre-bluegrass Appalachian at 110 BPM, clawhammer banjo, droning fiddle, no breaks — full-band groove from start to finish. 1920s mountain tradition.

Bluegrass Gospel

Stanley Brothers and Doyle Lawson at 100 BPM, three-part harmony hymns, mandolin tremolo, reverent lyrical themes. Sunday-morning Appalachia.

Bluegrass-Country

Alison Krauss-style crossover at 95 BPM, dobro slide, smoother vocals, country production with bluegrass instrumentation. Modern radio territory.

Jam-Grass

Yonder Mountain and Greensky Bluegrass at 130 BPM, extended improvisation, rock-influenced energy, festival-jam dynamics. Modern festival circuit.

Made for

Who uses bluegrass music?

Creators reaching for a specific mood without a budget for licensing.

Filmmakers

Period pieces, mountain narratives, southern-Americana scenes. Bluegrass anchors the time and place better than any score-only approach.

Travel Vloggers

Appalachian trips, mountain road content, southern food tours. Authentic regional scoring.

Brand Marketers

Outdoor, hunting, fishing, whiskey, and country-lifestyle campaigns. Bluegrass reads as authentic Americana.

Restaurants

BBQ joints, southern restaurants, country-themed venues. Custom bluegrass playlists for ambiance.

Game Devs

Frontier games, western RPGs, Appalachian-set narratives. Bluegrass diegetic music for saloons and travel scenes.

Documentary Producers

Rural-America documentaries, music histories, regional culture features. Authentic-feeling bluegrass scoring.

What you get
Full-song MP3 generationText-to-music promptsOptional custom lyricsBuilt-in style presetsAI prompt composerVoice-to-prompt inputTrack history & replayRegenerate variationsCommercial rights included

How do you get authentic-sounding banjo rolls from a text prompt?

A bluegrass music generator turns a text prompt into a full arrangement of banjo rolls, fiddle leads, mandolin chops and tight three-part harmony — traditional bluegrass, newgrass, old-time mountain, bluegrass gospel, jam-grass — composed from scratch rather than pulled from a stock Americana folder. Describe the tradition and the tempo, and the AI writes and produces the whole track.

Generic "country-folk" stock cues rarely capture what actually makes bluegrass sound like bluegrass — the specific interplay of banjo rolls, trading fiddle-and-mandolin breaks, and high-lonesome harmony singing. Generating from a prompt lets you name the exact sub-tradition instead of settling for a vague acoustic-Americana placeholder.

Getting the banjo, harmony and trading breaks right

Specific technique terms get specific results: "three-finger Scruggs banjo, forward rolls, G-tuning" captures the rapid-fire picking style bluegrass depends on, and "high-lonesome tenor, three-part harmony, bluegrass blend" produces the tight tenor-lead-baritone stack that defines the vocal sound. Bluegrass tradition also has instruments take turns soloing — prompting "fiddle break, then mandolin break, then banjo break" arranges the solos in the classic call-and-pass order.

Tempo separates the sub-styles: traditional bluegrass runs 130-160 BPM, old-time mountain 100-120, newgrass 110-130, bluegrass gospel 90-110, and jam-grass typically 120-140 with more extended improvisation built in.

From period films to BBQ-joint playlists

Filmmakers use bluegrass to anchor period pieces and southern-Americana scenes better than any generic score, and travel vloggers reach for it on Appalachian trips and mountain-road content. Restaurants — BBQ joints, southern spots, country-themed venues — generate custom bluegrass playlists for ambiance, brand marketers use it for outdoor, hunting and whiskey campaigns that read as authentic Americana, and documentary producers score rural-America and regional-culture features with it.

Arrangements can run 3 to 6 minutes with an intro vamp, vocal sections, instrumental breaks and an outro — long enough to work as standalone documentary scoring rather than a short loop.

Commercial rights for film and brand use

Every bluegrass track is generated from scratch, and paid plans include full commercial rights, covering documentary releases, restaurant playlists and brand campaigns without a separate licensing conversation.

Pick a banjo

Choose the tradition. Set the tempo. Generate a bluegrass track with the high lonesome built in.

Free to try · No credit card required

Keep exploring

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FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Can the AI generate authentic Scruggs-style banjo?

Yes. Prompt "three-finger Scruggs banjo, forward rolls, G-tuning" and the AI captures the rapid-fire bluegrass banjo technique. Earl Scruggs-style picking.

Will the harmony singing sound traditional?

Yes. Prompt for "high-lonesome tenor, three-part harmony, bluegrass blend" and the AI produces the tight tenor-lead-baritone stack the genre depends on.

Can I get fiddle and mandolin trading leads?

Yes. Bluegrass tradition has instruments take turns. Prompt "fiddle break, then mandolin break, then banjo break" and the AI arranges the solos in classic order.

Are tracks long enough for documentary scoring?

Yes. Generate 3–6 minute arrangements with intro vamp, vocal sections, instrumental breaks, and outro. Scoring-length material out of the box.

Best BPM?

Traditional bluegrass: 130–160. Old-time mountain: 100–120. Newgrass: 110–130. Bluegrass gospel: 90–110. Jam-grass varies — 120–140 typical.