Disco Music Generator
Four-on-the-floor kicks, lush strings, syncopated bass, and Studio 54 glamour. Generate classic disco, nu-disco, Italo, and modern disco-revival tracks at 115–125 BPM.
From prompt to finished track
Describe the track
One sentence is enough — genre, mood, tempo, instruments. Start from the Disco 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.
Disco styles you can generate
Pick a vibe and let the AI compose. Every track is original — no samples, no copyright headaches.
Classic Disco
Bee Gees and Donna Summer territory at 120 BPM, four-on-the-floor kick, lush string arrangements, syncopated hi-hats, falsetto hooks. Studio 54 1977.
Philly Soul Disco
Gamble & Huff sound at 118 BPM, sophisticated horn-and-string arrangements, smooth lead vocals, sweeping chord progressions. The O'Jays and MFSB.
Nu-Disco
Modern revival at 115 BPM, vintage analog warmth, sidechained pads, tasteful 80s synth flourishes. Dua Lipa and Daft Punk lineage.
Italo Disco
Early-80s Italian electronic disco at 125 BPM, arpeggiated synth bass, drum machines, melodic vocal hooks. Giorgio Moroder and Patrick Hernandez sound.
Hi-NRG
Faster proto-house at 130 BPM, energetic synth basslines, gay-club anthem energy. Bobby Orlando and Patrick Cowley pre-house tradition.
Boogie Disco
Early-80s disco-funk hybrid at 115 BPM, slap bass, electric piano, falsetto leads. The bridge between disco and funk-influenced 80s pop.
Who uses disco music?
Creators reaching for a specific mood without a budget for licensing.
Filmmakers
70s and 80s period content, dance-floor scenes, retro romance. Disco delivers the era better than any other genre.
Event DJs
Wedding receptions, themed parties, retro events. Original disco tracks to mix between Bee Gees originals without paying sync licensing.
TikTok Creators
Dance challenges, fashion reels, retro-aesthetic content. Disco never stops trending — get original tracks instead of fighting for trending audio.
Brand Marketers
Fashion, beauty, lifestyle campaigns with retro-cool positioning. Disco reads as confident, glamorous, danceable.
Restaurants & Bars
Roller-rink themed venues, retro cocktail bars, late-70s aesthetic restaurants. Custom disco playlists without monthly PRO fees.
Fitness Creators
Dance cardio, retro aerobics, Zumba-disco hybrids. The 120 BPM four-on-the-floor is workout-pacing perfection.
What actually separates classic disco from nu-disco?
A disco music generator writes an original four-on-the-floor track — classic Studio 54 strings, Italo-disco synth arpeggios, or a nu-disco revival groove — from a text prompt describing the era and tempo. Name the sub-style and BPM, and the AI composes the full arrangement from scratch, built around disco's specific groove DNA instead of a loop pulled from a stock library.
Disco is one of the most requested, and most licensed-to-death, retro sounds, which makes original composition especially useful here: a wedding DJ or a period-film scene needs the Bee Gees feeling without the Bee Gees sync fee. A disco music generator delivers the era's four-on-the-floor kick and lush strings without third-party samples or licensing paperwork.
Prompting by era and BPM
Disco's sub-styles are tightly tied to tempo, so naming both is the fastest way to the right sound. "Classic disco, 120 BPM, four-on-the-floor, lush strings, syncopated bass, falsetto vocal" pulls the Studio-54-era sound directly; nu-disco runs a touch slower at 115 BPM with sidechain compression and modern analog-synth flourishes over the same chord-progression DNA. Italo disco and Hi-NRG push to 125–130 BPM with arpeggiated synth bass and drum machines, while boogie disco sits at 113–117 BPM with slap bass and electric piano bridging disco into funk.
From wedding sets to retro fitness classes
Event DJs use original disco tracks to mix alongside actual Bee Gees records without paying sync licensing for a wedding reception or themed party, while filmmakers score 70s-and-80s period scenes and dance-floor moments that disco captures better than any other genre. TikTok creators generate original tracks for dance challenges and retro-aesthetic content instead of competing for the same trending audio clip, and fitness creators use the 120 BPM four-on-the-floor pulse for dance cardio and Zumba-disco hybrids.
Extended mixes and commercial rights
For DJ sets, generating extended-mix versions with intro, break and outro sections produces 5–7 minute disco arrangements built for club transitions rather than a radio-length cut. Paid plans include full commercial rights, so tracks built for a restaurant's retro-cocktail playlist or a monetized dance-challenge video are cleared without ongoing PRO fees.
Light up the dance floor
Pick the era. Set the tempo. Generate a disco track ready for the mirror ball.
Free to try · No credit card required
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Frequently Asked Questions
Can I get authentic 70s disco production?
Yes. Prompt "classic disco, 120 BPM, four-on-the-floor, lush strings, syncopated bass, falsetto vocal" and the AI delivers Studio-54-era sound. Analog warmth is reproducible.
How is nu-disco different from classic disco?
Nu-disco runs slightly slower (115 BPM vs 120), uses sidechain compression, and adds modern analog-synth flourishes. Same chord progressions and groove DNA, contemporary mixing.
Can I get Italo-disco-style arpeggios?
Yes. Prompt for "Italo disco, arpeggiated synth bass, Moroder-style, 125 BPM" and the AI generates the iconic sequenced bassline sound.
Are tracks long enough for club DJing?
Yes. Generate extended-mix versions with intro, break, and outro sections for DJ-friendly transitions. 5–7 minute disco arrangements work for club sets.
Best BPM for the dance floor?
Classic disco lives at 118–122 BPM. Nu-disco runs 110–118. Italo and Hi-NRG push to 125–130. Boogie-disco sits at 113–117. Pick by the energy your floor needs.