notevibes. Hardcore Music Generator

Hardcore Music Generator

Extreme-tempo electronic music with distorted kicks and aggressive energy. Generate hardcore techno, gabber, happy hardcore, frenchcore, and uptempo hardcore at 160–220 BPM.

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 Hardcore 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

Hardcore styles you can generate

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

Gabber

Rotterdam gabber at 180 BPM, distorted-and-clipped kick drums, dark aggressive atmosphere.

Happy Hardcore

UK happy hardcore at 175 BPM, bright-major-key melodies, fast piano-stab leads, mid-90s rave tradition.

Frenchcore

French hardcore at 200 BPM, super-distorted kicks, faster-than-gabber tempo, aggressive industrial atmosphere.

Uptempo Hardcore

Modern uptempo hardcore at 195 BPM, extreme-distortion sound design, festival-mainstage variant.

Hardcore Techno

Hardcore techno at 165 BPM, techno-rooted hardcore, less-melodic-more-percussive arrangements.

Speedcore

Extreme speedcore at 250 BPM, blast-beat-tempo hardcore, harsh-noise-influenced production.

Made for

Who uses hardcore music?

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

Festival DJs

Hardcore festival sets, Defqon.1 events, underground rave parties.

Game Devs

Combat sequences, racing-game intense sections, action-game boss battles.

Content Creators

Extreme-aesthetic content, hardcore-music-fan reels, festival-aftermath videos.

Action Sports Producers

Action sports edits, extreme-sports highlights, motorsports content.

Brand Marketers

Energy-drink campaigns with extreme positioning, hardcore-festival sponsorships.

Esports Producers

Esports tournament intros, hype packages, intense-match underscoring.

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

What does an AI hardcore music generator actually produce?

A hardcore music generator writes a complete, original track from a text prompt — the distorted kicks, extreme tempo and aggressive atmosphere of gabber, frenchcore or uptempo hardcore, composed from scratch instead of assembled from sample packs. Describe the subgenre and target BPM, and the model renders a full MP3 built around that energy.

Hardcore runs at tempos and distortion levels that most stock-music libraries do not cover well, since 160 to 220-plus BPM material with clipped kicks is a narrow niche. Generating it directly from a prompt means you get a track tuned to the exact subgenre and tempo you need, without digging through a catalog for something that actually hits that hard.

Prompting for the right subgenre and kick character

Hardcore splits into distinct lanes by tempo and kick treatment, so name both. "Gabber kick, clipped and distorted, Rotterdam-style" targets 175–185 BPM; "happy hardcore, bright major-key melody, fast piano-stab leads" sits at 170–180 BPM; "frenchcore, super-distorted kicks, aggressive industrial atmosphere" pushes to 195–210 BPM, and "speedcore, blast-beat tempo" goes past 240.

It also helps to say what it is not — hardcore runs at 160–220 BPM with a distorted-kick-driven structure, distinct from dubstep's 140 BPM wobble-bass half-time feel. Naming the exact subgenre keeps the AI from drifting into an adjacent electronic style.

Where hardcore tracks get used

Festival DJs use it directly for hardcore sets, Defqon.1-style events and underground rave parties, while esports producers reach for the same intensity in tournament intros and hype packages. Game developers score combat sequences and racing-game intense sections with it, and action sports producers cut extreme-sports and motorsports edits to the tempo.

Content creators building extreme-aesthetic reels and festival-aftermath videos, along with brand marketers running energy-drink campaigns with extreme positioning, use hardcore for the same reason: the tempo and distortion read as maximum intensity instantly.

Rights for festival and commercial use

Every hardcore track is generated from scratch, so there are no sampled kicks or stems from existing gabber or frenchcore records. Paid plans include full commercial rights, covering festival sets, sponsored content and any other paid use without a separate clearance process.

Push the BPM

Pick the subgenre. Set the extreme BPM. Generate hardcore music for festival-extreme energy.

Free to try · No credit card required

Keep exploring

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FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

How is hardcore different from dubstep?

Hardcore runs at 160–220 BPM with distorted-kick-drum-driven structure. Dubstep is 140 BPM with wobble-bass and half-time grooves.

Will the kicks be properly distorted?

Yes. Prompt "gabber kick, clipped and distorted, Rotterdam-style hardcore" and the AI delivers the iconic distorted-kick character.

Can I get happy hardcore?

Yes. Happy-hardcore subgenre delivers bright-major-key melodies over fast hardcore tempo.

Best for esports content?

Yes. Hardcore tempo and aggressive energy match esports intensity.

BPM range?

Gabber: 175–185. Happy hardcore: 170–180. Frenchcore: 195–210. Uptempo hardcore: 190–200. Hardcore techno: 160–175. Speedcore: 240–260+.