EDM Music Generator
Festival-built electronic dance music. Generate big-room, progressive, future bass, hardstyle, and mainstage EDM at 120–150 BPM with massive drops and arena energy.
From prompt to finished track
Describe the track
One sentence is enough — genre, mood, tempo, instruments. Start from the EDM 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.
EDM styles you can generate
Pick a vibe and let the AI compose. Every track is original — no samples, no copyright headaches.
Big-Room House
Hardwell and Martin Garrix at 128 BPM, simple powerful drops, festival-anthem leads, four-on-the-floor with massive kick. EDC mainstage 2014 blueprint.
Progressive House
Avicii and Deadmau5 at 128 BPM, melodic builds, emotional chord progressions, plucky leads, big chorus-style drops. Tomorrowland classic sound.
Future Bass
Flume and Illenium at 150 BPM, supersaw chord stabs, half-time drops, emotional pad work, vocal chop hooks. 2016 streaming-era EDM.
Hardstyle
Headhunterz and Brennan Heart at 150 BPM, distorted kick, melodic euphoric lead, anthem hooks. Dutch festival hardstyle tradition.
Mainstage Anthem
Festival-headliner energy at 128 BPM, vocal-led builds, drop that lands during a pyrotechnic moment, designed for 80,000-person crowds.
Tropical House
Kygo and Robin Schulz at 100 BPM, marimba and steel-drum leads, sun-drenched chord progressions, summer-anthem feel. Streaming-pop crossover.
Who uses edm music?
Creators reaching for a specific mood without a budget for licensing.
Festival DJs
Mainstage-ready original tracks for sets. Massive festival drops without licensing top-40 EDM catalog.
TikTok Creators
Drop-synced transitions, transformation reveals, hype content. EDM drops are made for editing punctuation.
Trailer Editors
Sports promos, esports trailers, action-game marketing. EDM big-room drops match trailer climax pacing.
Fitness Creators
HIIT workouts, spin classes, dance-cardio content. The 128 BPM is the universal workout tempo.
Sports Producers
Hype reels, walkout music, stadium intro packages. EDM delivers arena-scale energy and crowd-pop moments.
Brand Marketers
Energy drinks, gaming brands, festival sponsorships, sportswear. EDM reads as modern, high-energy, mass-market.
How do you write an EDM prompt that actually builds to a drop?
An EDM generator writes the whole festival-built track from a text prompt — the build, the drop, the mainstage energy — composed from scratch rather than assembled from stock loops. Name the subgenre, the tempo and what the drop should feel like, and the AI produces a finished track with the arena-scale impact the genre is built around.
That matters most for DJs and marketers who need mainstage-ready energy without licensing a top-40 EDM catalog track. Because each track is generated on demand, you can specify exactly which subgenre and BPM the moment calls for instead of searching a stock library for something that happens to build the right way.
Naming the subgenre and the drop
Big-room house sits at 128 BPM with simple powerful drops and four-on-the-floor kicks in the Hardwell and Martin Garrix mold. Progressive house shares the 128 BPM tempo but leans on melodic builds and emotional chord progressions instead. Future bass and hardstyle both run at 150 BPM — future bass with supersaw stabs and half-time drops, hardstyle with a distorted kick and euphoric anthem leads. Tropical house sits apart at 100 BPM with marimba and steel-drum leads for a sun-drenched, summer-anthem feel.
For the drop itself, prompt "huge festival drop, layered synth lead, sidechained pad, kick-and-snare drum pattern" — that combination of instructions is what produces mainstage-scale impact rather than a generic buildup.
From festival sets to HIIT playlists
Festival DJs generate mainstage-ready originals for sets, TikTok creators build drop-synced transitions and transformation reveals around the exact drop timing, trailer editors use big-room drops for sports and esports promo climaxes, and fitness creators lean on the 128 BPM tempo as the universal workout speed for HIIT and spin classes. Sports producers use EDM for hype reels, walkout music and stadium intro packages.
Mainstage energy without the licensing catalog
Commercial rights included on paid plans mean a festival DJ, brand marketer or trailer editor can generate an original EDM track and use it under their own name — no licensing a top-40 EDM catalog track for a set or a campaign, and no clearance step after the fact.
Build the drop
Pick the subgenre. Set the build. Generate an EDM track ready for the festival stage.
Free to try · No credit card required
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Frequently Asked Questions
What's the difference between EDM and house?
House is a specific genre at 122–128 BPM with deep four-on-the-floor groove. EDM is the festival-era umbrella term — big-room, progressive, future bass, hardstyle, all under "EDM."
Will the drops have festival impact?
Yes. Prompt "huge festival drop, layered synth lead, sidechained pad, kick-and-snare drum pattern" and the AI generates mainstage-scale energy. Test on real speakers.
Can I get vocal-led EDM?
Yes. Prompt "topline vocal, sung pre-chorus, vocal-led build into drop" and the AI generates vocal-EDM in the Calvin Harris / Zedd radio-crossover style.
Best for sports hype reels?
Big-room house and progressive house at 128 BPM. The four-on-the-floor and anthem leads deliver the "we are about to win" energy stadium edits need.
Standard BPM?
Big-room and progressive house: 128. Future bass: 150 (half-time feel). Hardstyle: 150. Tropical house: 100. The 128 BPM is EDM's center of gravity.