notevibes. Breakbeat Music Generator

Breakbeat Music Generator

Syncopated drum-break-driven electronic music. Generate big beat, nu-skool breaks, breakbeat hardcore, electro-breaks, and breaks across the breakbeat-music spectrum at 125–145 BPM.

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 Breakbeat 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

Breakbeat styles you can generate

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

Big Beat

Chemical Brothers and Fatboy Slim at 130 BPM, big-fat drum breaks, distorted electronics, festival-anthem energy.

Nu-Skool Breaks

Adam Freeland at 135 BPM, modern breakbeat variant, electronic-leaning sound-design.

Breakbeat Hardcore

90s rave breakbeat at 145 BPM, sampled-Amen-break-driven, ragga-vocal samples.

Electro-Breaks

Plump DJs at 130 BPM, electro-influenced breakbeat variant, synth-bass-driven.

Funky Breaks

Sample-funk breakbeat at 110 BPM, funk-and-soul-sample-driven, hip-hop-breakbeat crossover.

Breakcore

Aphex Twin and Venetian Snares at 175 BPM, ultra-fast chopped breakbeats, experimental-electronic.

Made for

Who uses breakbeat music?

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

Content Creators

Action-aesthetic reels, kinetic-editing content, breakbeat-paired video creation.

Sports Producers

Action-sports highlights, parkour edits, BMX-and-skate videos.

Game Devs

Racing games, fighting games, action-game sequences.

Underground DJs

Breakbeat-scene events, underground rave parties, breakbeat-festival sets.

Brand Marketers

Energy-aesthetic brand campaigns, athletic-product marketing.

Filmmakers

Heist films, action-aesthetic narratives, late-90s-themed period pieces.

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

Can an AI actually generate breakbeat, not just a drum loop?

A breakbeat music generator writes a full track around the genre's core idea — syncopated, chopped drum breaks instead of a straight four-on-the-floor kick — composed from a single prompt rather than assembled from a break-sample library. Describe the subgenre and tempo, and it renders a finished MP3 with the break pattern, bassline and production style built in.

Classic breakbeat production leans heavily on sampled breaks (the Amen break above all), which is exactly the kind of source material that gets flagged on YouTube and Twitch. An AI-generated breakbeat track is composed from scratch, so the drum breaks in it aren't sampled from anywhere — nothing for a rights holder to claim, and full commercial rights on paid plans besides.

Naming the subgenre gets you the right break

Breakbeat covers a wide range, so the subgenre name in the prompt matters more than almost anywhere else: "big beat at 130 BPM, distorted electronics, festival-anthem energy" gets the Chemical Brothers and Fatboy Slim sound, while "breakbeat hardcore at 145 BPM, sampled Amen-break-driven, ragga vocal samples" pulls 90s rave energy instead. Funky breaks at 110 BPM leans on sample-funk horns and a hip-hop crossover feel, and pushing toward breakcore (170+ BPM) asks for ultra-fast chopped breaks and experimental sound design.

Tempo is the fastest way to steer the AI between subgenres, since breakbeat spans 105 BPM funky breaks up through 200+ BPM breakcore under one umbrella term.

Built for kinetic editing, not just DJ sets

Content creators cutting action-sports highlights, parkour edits and kinetic-editing reels reach for breakbeat because the syncopation matches fast cuts in a way a steady house beat doesn't, and game developers use the same energy for racing and fighting-game sequences. Underground DJs generating tracks for breakbeat-scene events get subgenre-accurate material without digging through old rave compilations for a break that isn't already overplayed.

Big beat in particular gets used for heist-film-style scoring — its late-90s, driving-electronics feel is the unofficial sound of that kind of edit.

Commercial rights, no clearance chase

Paid plans include full commercial rights, so a generated breakbeat track can go straight into a monetized video, brand campaign or DJ set without chasing sample clearance the way a track built on real breaks would require.

Break the beat

Pick the subgenre. Set the BPM. Generate breakbeat music for syncopated-kinetic energy.

Free to try · No credit card required

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FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

How is breakbeat different from DnB?

Breakbeat runs at 125–145 BPM with syncopated drum-break grooves. DnB is faster (165–180 BPM) and built on chopped Amen breaks specifically.

Can I get big beat for late-90s feel?

Yes. Big-beat subgenre is purpose-designed.

Will it work for action-sports edits?

Yes. Breakbeat syncopation matches kinetic-editing-and-action-sports content perfectly.

Best for heist-film scoring?

Yes. Big-beat is the unofficial heist-film genre — Snatch, Ocean's Eleven, Lock Stock all use big-beat scoring.

BPM range?

Big beat: 125–135. Nu-skool breaks: 130–140. Breakbeat hardcore: 140–150. Electro-breaks: 125–135. Funky breaks: 105–115. Breakcore: 170–200+.