Drum and Bass Music Generator
Breakbeat-driven electronic music at 165–180 BPM. Generate liquid, neurofunk, jump-up, jungle, and DnB across the full UK-bass spectrum.
From prompt to finished track
Describe the track
One sentence is enough — genre, mood, tempo, instruments. Start from the Drum and Bass 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.
Drum and Bass styles you can generate
Pick a vibe and let the AI compose. Every track is original — no samples, no copyright headaches.
Liquid DnB
High Contrast and Netsky at 174 BPM, smooth jazzy chords, vocal samples, melodic basslines, atmospheric pads. The sophisticated, listenable end of DnB.
Neurofunk
Noisia and Black Sun Empire at 174 BPM, aggressive sound-design bass, mechanical drum programming, dystopian textures. Technical and dark.
Jump-Up
Hazard and Macky Gee at 174 BPM, simple bouncy basslines, big drops, club-friendly hooks. The accessible, festival-anthem end of DnB.
Jungle
Original 90s breakbeat hardcore at 165 BPM, chopped Amen breaks, ragga vocal samples, dub-influenced bass. Goldie and LTJ Bukem era.
Minimal / Deep DnB
Calibre and Marcus Intalex at 172 BPM, sparse arrangements, deep rolling bass, jazz-influenced harmony, restraint over excess.
Drumstep / Half-Time
Half-time feel at 174 BPM, dubstep-style drums in DnB tempo, heavy bass focus. Crossover bridge between DnB and dubstep.
Who uses drum and bass music?
Creators reaching for a specific mood without a budget for licensing.
Game Devs
Combat sequences, racing games, cyberpunk narratives. DnB delivers urgent, mechanical energy that suits action-heavy gameplay.
Content Creators
Sports highlights, action sequences, parkour content, esports. DnB tempo matches kinetic editing.
Filmmakers
Chase scenes, cyberpunk shorts, action sequences, dystopian narratives. DnB scores urgency better than orchestral hits.
Sports Producers
Highlight reels, training montages, esports broadcasts, snowboard and skate edits. The 174 BPM matches frame-cut energy.
Festival DJs
Original DnB tracks for club and festival sets. Extended intro/outro mixes for transitions, originals for unique drops.
Brand Marketers
Energy drinks, gaming brands, sportswear, performance products. DnB reads as fast, sharp, modern.
Can an AI generator actually nail a drum and bass drop?
A drum and bass generator writes and produces a full track from a single prompt, composing the breakbeat drums, sub-bass and synth work from scratch instead of chopping up an old jungle break or a licensed sample pack. Describe the subgenre, the tempo and the texture, and the AI hands back a finished MP3 built at DnB tempo — no crate-digging for a break that fits, no clearance questions about where the Amen came from.
That matters because drum and bass is defined almost entirely by its breakbeat and bass programming, and getting those right by ear from a sample library takes real production time. Generating the track from a text prompt collapses that into one step: describe the reese bass or the jazzy chords you want, and the AI builds the arrangement around it at 165–180 BPM.
Naming the subgenre, the bass, and the break
Drum and bass splits into recognizable subgenres and each one prompts differently. Liquid DnB wants "smooth jazzy chords, vocal samples, melodic basslines, atmospheric pads" at 174 BPM; neurofunk wants "Noisia-style sound design, aggressive reese bass, mechanical modulation" at the same tempo; jump-up wants simple bouncy basslines and big club-friendly drops; jungle drops the tempo to 165 BPM for "chopped Amen break, classic jungle pattern" with ragga vocal samples and dub-influenced bass.
The bass design carries most of a DnB track's identity, so naming it specifically — reese bass, sound-design bass, rolling sub-bass — gets closer to the reference than a generic "drum and bass" prompt would.
Where the tempo and energy get used
The 174 BPM breakbeat suits anything that needs urgency: game devs scoring combat sequences and racing levels, content creators cutting sports highlights and parkour reels, filmmakers scoring chase scenes, and sports producers building highlight reels and esports broadcasts where the tempo matches the frame-cut editing. Festival DJs use the generator for original tracks to drop into sets, generating extended intro and outro sections for cleaner mix transitions.
Original tracks, no clearance needed
Because every track is composed from scratch rather than built on a sampled break, there is no clearance question hanging over the Amen or the vocal chop — commercial rights are included on paid plans, so a drum and bass track generated for a set, a highlight reel, or a brand campaign is yours to use under your own name from the start.
Set the breakbeat
Pick the subgenre. Set the BPM. Generate a DnB track ready for the dance.
Free to try · No credit card required
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Frequently Asked Questions
What's the standard DnB tempo?
Drum and bass sits at 165–180 BPM, with 174 BPM being the modern standard. Jungle runs slower (160–170). The fast-tempo breakbeat is what defines the genre.
Can I get authentic Amen breaks?
Prompt "chopped Amen break, classic jungle pattern" and the AI generates the iconic breakbeat-hardcore drum sound that built jungle and DnB.
Will the bass design be aggressive enough?
For neurofunk, prompt "Noisia-style sound design, aggressive reese bass, mechanical modulation" and the AI delivers the heavy, processed bass character. Studio monitors and subwoofers expose the work.
Can I get vocal samples in liquid DnB?
Prompt "soulful vocal sample, chopped, female lead" and the AI generates the vocal-led liquid-funk arrangement style. Sets the smooth-DnB mood.
Best subgenre for beginners?
Liquid DnB is the most accessible — melodic, jazzy, listenable. Jump-up is the most club-friendly. Neurofunk and minimal DnB require more genre familiarity.