notevibes. Devotional Music Generator

Devotional Music Generator

Sacred music across traditions — Hindu bhajan, Sufi qawwali, Christian worship, Buddhist chant, gospel. Generate reverent, prayer-ready tracks with tablas, harmoniums, choirs, and authentic textures.

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 Devotional 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

Devotional styles you can generate

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

Bhajan

Hindu devotional songs centered on harmonium, tabla, and call-and-response vocals. Mid-tempo around 90 BPM, repeating mantras like Hare Krishna and Om Namah Shivaya.

Qawwali

Sufi devotional music with hand-clapped rhythm, harmonium drones, and ecstatic lead vocals. Builds from prayerful murmurs to soaring tahirat in the Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan tradition.

Christian Worship

Modern praise band sound — piano, electric guitar swells, soft drums, four-part choir. Hillsong, Bethel, Elevation Worship anatomy at 70–80 BPM.

Gospel

Black church tradition with Hammond organ, walking bass, full choir, and lead testimonies. Powerful 75 BPM grooves with key-change climaxes.

Buddhist Chant

Tibetan throat singing, bowls, gongs, and slow recitation. Deep drones at extremely low BPM — almost timeless, built around overtone harmonics.

Kirtan

Sanskrit mantra chanting with mridanga, kartals, and harmonium. Builds from gentle 60 BPM to ecstatic 140 BPM peaks in a single piece.

Made for

Who uses devotional music?

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

Yoga & Meditation Studios

Class background music that respects the tradition. Generate authentic-feeling bhajans and kirtans without licensing concerns.

Worship Pastors

Original transition beds, altar-call underscores, and instrumental versions of sermon themes. Adjustable to your service runtime.

Spiritual Content Creators

YouTube prayer videos, Instagram daily mantra reels, podcast intros. Track variations that avoid sampling commercial devotional artists.

Documentary Filmmakers

Religious history films, pilgrimage docs, faith-based projects. Tradition-accurate scoring without manuscript licensing.

Wedding & Ceremony Planners

Custom processionals, prayer interludes, and ceremony tracks for interfaith and traditional events. Length and key tuned to your moment.

Sleep & Prayer Apps

Long-form chant loops, scripture meditation beds, rosary backings. Royalty-free, app-bundle-friendly devotional audio.

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 AI generate music that respects a devotional tradition?

A devotional music generator writes sacred, prayer-ready tracks across traditions — bhajan, qawwali, Christian worship, gospel, Buddhist chant, kirtan — from a text description of the tradition, mood and tempo. Rather than one generic "meditation music" preset, it composes a genre-accurate arrangement: harmonium and tabla for a bhajan, Hammond organ and full choir for gospel, throat singing and gongs for a Buddhist chant.

Because the traditions differ so much in instrumentation and pacing, the model was trained on serious devotional repertoires and produces dignified results when prompted with respectful language — "reverent," "prayerful," "sacred," "meditative" — rather than party-music modifiers. Vocal style varies by track: some pieces use stylized Sanskrit, Arabic, Tibetan or Latin phonemes, others are wordless devotional vocalizing; for exact scripture or a named mantra, the cleanest approach is to sing or record the lyric yourself and use the generator for the instrumental bed underneath.

Naming the tradition and the deity or theme

Bhajans center on harmonium and tabla with call-and-response vocals around 90 BPM, built on repeating mantras like Hare Krishna or Om Namah Shivaya; prompting the specific deity or mantra theme shapes the mood, since a Krishna kirtan sounds different from a Shiva bhajan. Qawwali builds from hand-clapped, harmonium-drone murmurs to soaring lead vocals in the Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan tradition, gospel leans on Hammond organ, walking bass and full choir at 75 BPM, and kirtan starts gentle around 60 BPM before climbing to ecstatic 140 BPM peaks within a single piece.

Where reverent music gets used

Yoga and meditation studios use bhajans and kirtans for class background without licensing concerns, while worship pastors generate original transition beds and altar-call underscores sized to a service's runtime. Documentary filmmakers score pilgrimage and faith-based films with tradition-accurate cues instead of licensing manuscript recordings, and sleep-and-prayer apps use long-form chant loops and scripture-meditation beds as royalty-free, bundle-friendly devotional audio.

Using it in an actual service

Paid plans include full commercial rights, so generated devotional music can play during services, livestreams, podcasts and church social media without CCLI or PRO fees — and the same account can switch traditions per generation, producing a gospel track one day and a qawwali or bhajan the next.

Sound the sacred

Choose a tradition. Set the tempo. Let the AI score your prayer.

Free to try · No credit card required

Keep exploring

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FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Can the AI generate authentic-sounding bhajans and kirtans?

Yes. The model captures harmonium drones, tabla patterns, kartals, and call-and-response vocals. Prompt the specific deity or mantra theme to shape the mood — Krishna kirtans sound different from Shiva bhajans.

Are the chants in real languages?

Vocal style varies. Some pieces use stylized Sanskrit, Arabic, Tibetan, or Latin phonemes; others are wordless devotional vocalizing. For exact scripture or named mantras, sing or record the lyric yourself and use the AI for the instrumental bed.

Can I use generated worship music in church services?

Yes. All tracks include full commercial rights — play them during services, livestreams, podcasts, and church social media without CCLI or PRO fees.

Will it respect the tradition or sound like a parody?

The AI was trained on serious devotional repertoires. Prompts using respectful language — "reverent," "prayerful," "sacred," "meditative" — produce dignified results. Avoid party-music modifiers.

Can I generate Christian and Hindu devotional music with one account?

Yes. Switch between traditions per generation. The same workflow produces gospel, qawwali, bhajan, and Christian worship — pick the sub-style at prompt time.