Celtic Music Generator
Tin whistle, fiddle, bodhrán, and uilleann pipes. Generate Irish, Scottish, and pan-Celtic music — jigs, reels, ballads, and modern Celtic-fusion at 120–180 BPM.
From prompt to finished track
Describe the track
One sentence is enough — genre, mood, tempo, instruments. Start from the Celtic prompts above or write your own.
Generate and iterate
The AI composes an original track from scratch — no samples. Regenerate variations until one fits, or tweak the prompt and lyrics.
Download the MP3
Grab the full song as an MP3 with commercial rights included, ready for videos, streams and playlists.
Celtic styles you can generate
Pick a vibe and let the AI compose. Every track is original — no samples, no copyright headaches.
Irish Jig
Traditional 6/8 jig at 130 BPM, tin whistle lead, bodhrán pulse, fiddle harmony, pub-session energy. Sligo and Donegal styles.
Reel
4/4 Irish reel at 110 BPM (fast feel), driving fiddle and flute, accordion accompaniment, dance-tune structure. The bedrock of céilí dancing.
Celtic Ballad
Slow narrative ballad at 70 BPM, fingerpicked guitar, single voice with whistle countermelody, story-song structure. Christy Moore tradition.
Scottish Highland
Pipe-band style at 105 BPM, Great Highland bagpipes, snare drums, march or strathspey rhythms. Military and ceremonial tradition.
Celtic Mystical
Enya and Loreena McKennitt at 75 BPM, layered vocal pads, harp arpeggios, atmospheric reverb, Gaelic-language vocal hooks.
Celtic Rock
Dropkick Murphys and Flogging Molly at 160 BPM, distorted guitars over tin whistle, pub-punk energy, bagpipe leads. Modern fusion sound.
Who uses celtic music?
Creators reaching for a specific mood without a budget for licensing.
Filmmakers
Medieval epics, Irish narratives, Scottish historical pieces. Celtic music anchors time and place with cultural specificity.
Game Devs
Fantasy RPGs, medieval games, Celtic-mythology narratives. Loopable tavern and travel music in authentic regional style.
Travel Vloggers
Ireland and Scotland trip content, Highland tours, Dublin pub crawls. Region-authentic scoring per destination.
Wedding Videographers
Irish and Scottish heritage weddings, handfasting ceremonies, Celtic-themed events. Custom processionals and recessionals.
Irish Pubs
Pub playlists, session-music ambiance, holiday programming. Authentic Celtic music without licensing The Chieftains catalog.
Audiobook Producers
Celtic-themed fantasy, historical fiction, Irish memoir. Mood-matched underscoring per chapter.
What makes Celtic AI music sound authentic instead of generic 'fantasy folk'?
A Celtic music generator writes an original track built around the genre's actual instrumentation — tin whistle, fiddle, bodhrán, uilleann pipes — rather than a generic synth-harp preset labeled "Celtic." One prompt naming the tradition (Irish, Scottish, pan-Celtic) and tempo produces a finished track with period-appropriate arrangement and structure.
Because the track is composed from scratch, it doesn't rely on licensing an actual traditional recording or a specific artist's catalog — useful for anyone who needs a Celtic sound without clearing rights to a real session recording or a well-known composer's score.
Naming the instruments and the tune form
Celtic instrumentation generates convincingly when it's named directly — tin whistle, uilleann pipes, bodhrán, bouzouki, hammered dulcimer, Celtic harp all render correctly when specified in the prompt. Tune structure matters as much as instrumentation: prompting "Irish jig in 6/8, AABB form, key of D" pulls a traditional session-style arrangement rather than a loose approximation, and the same applies to reels, which run in 4/4 with a fast dance-tune feel even though the counted tempo (105–115 BPM) reads slower than the energy suggests.
Tempo separates the six Celtic styles cleanly: jigs sit at 120–140 BPM, ballads drop to 60–80 BPM, Scottish pipe marches run 90–105 BPM, and Celtic rock pushes up to 150–180 BPM — naming the BPM in the prompt keeps the AI in the right subgenre.
Scoring fantasy games and Irish-heritage productions
Celtic music is the de facto sound of fantasy RPGs, and game developers use it to score tavern scenes, travel sequences and Celtic-mythology narratives with loopable, regionally authentic music instead of recycled stock loops. Filmmakers and audiobook producers lean on the same styles for medieval epics, Irish narratives and Celtic-themed historical fiction, while wedding videographers generate custom processionals and recessionals for Irish and Scottish heritage weddings and handfasting ceremonies. Irish pubs use instrumental versions for session-music ambiance without licensing an actual traditional catalog.
Vocals in Gaelic, and full commercial rights
Specify "vocals in Irish Gaelic" or "Scots Gaelic vocals" to get language-appropriate sung melodies, particularly useful for atmospheric Celtic mystical tracks. Paid plans include full commercial rights, covering everything from a pub playlist to a licensed film score.
Hear the highlands
Pick the tradition. Set the tempo. Generate a Celtic track with the heritage built in.
Free to try · No credit card required
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Frequently Asked Questions
Can I get uilleann pipes and tin whistle?
Yes. Celtic instrumentation — tin whistle, uilleann pipes, bodhrán, bouzouki, hammered dulcimer, Celtic harp — all generate convincingly. Specify and the AI works them in.
Will jigs and reels follow traditional structure?
Yes. Prompt "Irish jig in 6/8, AABB form, key of D" and the AI generates traditional tune-form arrangements. Suitable for session-style playback.
Can I get vocals in Gaelic?
Specify "vocals in Irish Gaelic" or "Scots Gaelic vocals" and the AI generates language-appropriate sung melodies. Useful for atmospheric Celtic mystical tracks.
Best for medieval-fantasy game scoring?
Yes. Celtic music is the unofficial sound of fantasy RPGs. Generate tavern reels, travel music, and battle marches in authentic regional style.
Best BPM?
Jigs: 120–140. Reels: 105–115 (fast feel). Ballads: 60–80. Scottish pipe marches: 90–105. Celtic rock: 150–180. Mystical Celtic: 70–85.