Chinese Music Generator
Music drawing on Chinese traditions — guzheng, erhu, dizi, pipa — and modern Mandopop. Wuxia film scores, lunar-new-year fanfares, contemporary C-pop ballads, traditional folk arrangements.
From prompt to finished track
Describe the track
One sentence is enough — genre, mood, tempo, instruments. Start from the Chinese 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.
Chinese styles you can generate
Pick a vibe and let the AI compose. Every track is original — no samples, no copyright headaches.
Guzheng Traditional
Solo guzheng with pentatonic glissandi, harmonic ornaments on the long notes, the meditative tea-ceremony underscore at 70 bpm.
Erhu Melancholy Solo
Solo erhu over light orchestral pad, lyrical melody, the wuxia-film-tearful-moment palette with traditional Chinese pentatonic scale.
Wuxia Cinematic
Erhu and dizi over full Western orchestra, taiko-drum hits, soaring choir, the Crouching-Tiger-Hidden-Dragon score template.
Modern Mandopop Ballad
Felt piano intro, lush strings, female lead vocal in Mandarin, the Jay-Chou-and-Jolin-Tsai contemporary-pop arrangement at 75 bpm.
Lunar New Year Fanfare
Suona horn lead, gongs and cymbals, dragon-dance percussion, celebratory major-key arrangement for festival processions and family gatherings.
Traditional Folk
Pipa and dizi duet, light percussion, simple melodic structure, the rural-folk-and-storytelling palette of regional Chinese musical traditions.
Who uses chinese music?
Creators reaching for a specific mood without a budget for licensing.
Asian Cinema Producers
Score wuxia, period-drama, and contemporary Chinese-language films with original music that respects traditional instrumentation while delivering cinematic scale.
Chinese-Language Audiobook Producers
Score chapter intros, dramatic scenes, and traditional-setting passages with underscore tonally matched to the regional and historical setting.
Game Developers
Score Chinese-mythology-inspired games, wuxia titles, and Lunar-New-Year live events with original soundtracks rather than recycled stock loops.
Chinese Content Creators
Original underscore for vlogs, cooking shows, and travel content focused on Chinese culture. Royalty-free and culturally appropriate.
Chinese Restaurant & Tea-House Sound Design
Custom traditional and modern Chinese instrumental playlists for restaurants, tea houses, and cultural-center lobbies.
Cultural Event Planners
Custom music for Lunar New Year, Mid-Autumn Festival, and Chinese weddings — original compositions in the appropriate cultural style.
How do you generate Chinese music that uses guzheng and erhu, not a generic 'Asian' preset?
A Chinese music generator writes an original track from a prompt naming the instruments and tradition you want — guzheng, erhu, dizi, pipa, or a modern Mandopop arrangement — rather than defaulting to a generic pentatonic loop. It composes the piece from scratch, following the phrasing and ornamentation appropriate to whichever tradition you specify.
That specificity matters for anything culturally facing: a wuxia film score, a Lunar New Year event or a Chinese-language audiobook needs music that reads as authentic rather than a stock "Oriental" cue, and a generated track can be built around the exact instrument, scale and mood the project calls for instead of licensing a stock library that treats the whole tradition as one interchangeable sound.
Naming the instrument gets you the right playing technique
Specifying instruments directly — "guzheng solo," "erhu melody over orchestra," "dizi flute with light percussion" — gets them layered in with appropriate playing techniques, and asking for a "pentatonic scale, traditional Chinese melody" keeps the harmony in traditional Chinese tonal organization instead of Western chord changes. The six styles split cleanly by mood and instrumentation: solo guzheng at 70 BPM for a meditative tea-ceremony feel, solo erhu over orchestral pad for the wuxia tearful-moment palette, and a full wuxia-cinematic build layering erhu and dizi over Western orchestra with taiko hits and choir for Crouching-Tiger-scale scoring.
Mandopop ballads and Lunar New Year fanfares
Modern Mandopop ballads use a felt-piano intro, lush strings and a female lead vocal at 75 BPM in the Jay Chou and Jolin Tsai contemporary-pop tradition, and lyrics can be provided directly in Mandarin, Cantonese or Taiwanese Mandarin for the AI to sing with appropriate phrasing and tonal sensitivity. Lunar New Year fanfare tracks lean on suona horn, gongs, cymbals and dragon-dance percussion for festival processions and family gatherings, while traditional folk pairs pipa and dizi for a simpler rural-storytelling palette.
Asian cinema producers, game developers and cultural event planners use these styles to score wuxia titles, Chinese-mythology games, and Lunar New Year or Mid-Autumn Festival events with music matched to the specific setting rather than a generic cue.
Commercial rights for cultural events and broadcast
Paid plans grant full commercial rights covering cultural events, festivals, brand activations and broadcast — including Lunar New Year events, restaurant and tea-house playlists, and Chinese-language audiobook production.
Score the dynasty, the festival, the ballad
Generate Chinese traditional and Mandopop tracks in minutes.
Free to try · No credit card required
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Frequently Asked Questions
Can the AI generate music with guzheng, erhu, and dizi?
Yes. Specify the instruments — "guzheng solo," "erhu melody over orchestra," "dizi flute with light percussion" — and the AI will layer them with appropriate playing techniques.
Can I generate Mandopop with lyrics in Mandarin?
Yes. Provide Mandarin lyrics in your prompt and the AI will sing them with appropriate phrasing and tonal sensitivity. Cantonese and Taiwanese Mandarin are also supported.
Can I get a traditional pentatonic scale instead of Western chord changes?
Yes. Prompt for "pentatonic scale, traditional Chinese melody" and the AI will avoid Western harmonic conventions in favor of traditional Chinese tonal organization.
Can I use generated Chinese music in a Lunar New Year event?
Yes. Paid plans grant full commercial rights including cultural events, festivals, brand activations, and broadcast.
Can the AI generate wuxia-style cinematic music?
Yes. Prompt for "wuxia cinematic, erhu and orchestra, taiko hits, choir" and the AI will produce the hybrid Chinese-Western score sound common in martial-arts epics.