Hip-Hop Music Generator
Beats across every era and region — boom-bap, trap, drill, lo-fi, West Coast G-funk, and modern hyperpop-rap. Generate full instrumentals at 70–160 BPM with hard drums and headknock samples.
From prompt to finished track
Describe the track
One sentence is enough — genre, mood, tempo, instruments. Start from the Hip-Hop 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.
Hip-Hop styles you can generate
Pick a vibe and let the AI compose. Every track is original — no samples, no copyright headaches.
Boom-Bap
Crunchy chopped soul samples, dusty drums, vinyl crackle at 90 BPM. DJ Premier and Pete Rock golden-era — head-nod east coast 90s tradition.
Trap
Hi-hat rolls, 808 sub-bass slides, sparse melodic stabs at 140 BPM half-time. Metro Boomin and Lex Luger Atlanta-trap blueprint.
Drill
Sliding 808s, snappy snares, dark piano motifs at 140 BPM. UK drill (Chicago drill's grimy younger sibling) — Pop Smoke and Central Cee territory.
Lo-Fi Hip-Hop
Jazzy Rhodes chords, tape hiss, soft boom-bap drums at 80 BPM. ChilledCow / Nujabes-influenced study and chill aesthetic.
West Coast G-Funk
Whining synth leads, deep funk bass, talkbox melodies at 95 BPM. Dr. Dre and DJ Quik 1990s LA tradition — Chronic-era warmth.
Modern / Hyperpop Rap
Pitched vocal chops, distorted 808s, ear-candy synths at 150 BPM. Yeat and Playboi Carti influence — chaotic, melodic, internet-native.
Who uses hip-hop music?
Creators reaching for a specific mood without a budget for licensing.
Rappers & Songwriters
Custom instrumentals tuned to your verse count, BPM, and key. Skip producer-search and gatekeepers — generate beats matched to your flow.
YouTube Beat Channels
Type-beat content at scale. Generate "Drake type beat," "Travis Scott type beat," "Pop Smoke type beat" at YouTube-friendly lengths.
TikTok Creators
Original 15–60 second hip-hop loops with hard hooks. Build a sonic identity instead of riding trending audio that disappears next week.
Game Devs
Sports games, racing games, urban-setting narrative games. Diegetic radio stations and combat-music stems in authentic regional styles.
Fitness Creators
Workout reels, gym ads, basketball-training content. Hard-hitting trap and drill at workout BPMs.
Brand Marketers
Sneaker drops, streetwear campaigns, sports brand films. Authentic-feeling hip-hop scoring without per-track licensing.
How do you generate a hip-hop beat that actually fits your flow?
A hip-hop music generator writes a complete instrumental from a text prompt — the drums, bass, samples and melodic hooks — composed from scratch instead of pulled from a loop pack, and rendered as a full MP3 tuned to whatever era and tempo you describe, from 70 to 160 BPM.
That matters for rappers and beat-makers specifically because most instrumentals come from a producer catalog or a sample-based loop kit, which means shared beats, licensing splits, or samples that need clearing before a song can go anywhere. Generating an original instrumental means the beat is tuned to your verse count, key and BPM from the start, and there is no sample sitting underneath it to clear later.
Prompting across hip-hop eras
Each era has its own texture, so name it. "Boom-bap, crunchy chopped soul samples, dusty drums, vinyl crackle at 90 BPM" gets the DJ Premier golden-era sound; "trap, hi-hat rolls, sliding 808 sub-bass at 140 BPM half-time" targets the Metro Boomin blueprint; "UK drill, sliding 808s, dark piano motif at 140 BPM" leans into the Pop Smoke and Central Cee lane; "West Coast G-funk, whining synth leads, talkbox at 95 BPM" pulls from the Dr. Dre tradition.
To push the low end, prompt "hard 808 sub-bass, sliding pitches, distorted low end" directly. Type beats work the same way — describe the stylistic territory, such as "Drake-style melodic trap, OVO-style production, dark synth pads, 80 BPM half-time," rather than naming a specific song, and the AI captures the sonic world without copying it.
Where creators put these beats to work
Rappers and songwriters use custom instrumentals tuned to their verse count and key to skip the producer-search step entirely, while YouTube beat channels generate type-beat content at scale — "Drake type beat," "Travis Scott type beat" — at YouTube-friendly lengths. TikTok creators build original 15 to 60-second loops with hard hooks instead of riding trending audio that disappears the next week.
Game developers use hip-hop instrumentals for sports titles, racing games and urban-setting narratives, including diegetic radio stations in authentic regional styles, and fitness creators score workout reels and gym content with hard-hitting trap and drill at workout tempos.
Recording, selling and rights
Generate the instrumental, download the MP3, and record a verse over it in any DAW — full commercial rights on paid plans mean the finished song can go to streaming platforms under your own name. The same rights cover selling beats directly: beat-lease sales, exclusive sales, BeatStars uploads and Splice marketplace inclusion are all covered, since each instrumental is an original composition rather than a sample-based loop.
Get your next beat
Describe the era. Set the BPM. Get an instrumental ready to record over.
Free to try · No credit card required
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Frequently Asked Questions
Can I record vocals over generated hip-hop instrumentals?
Yes. Generate the instrumental, download the MP3, and record your verse in any DAW. Full commercial rights mean you can release the finished song on streaming platforms.
Will the 808s slap?
Prompt "hard 808 sub-bass, sliding pitches, distorted low end" to push the bass. The AI produces convincing modern-trap 808 patterns with proper sub-frequency content.
Can I get type beats — Drake, Travis, Pop Smoke?
Yes. Prompt the artist's stylistic territory — "Drake-style melodic trap, OVO-style production, dark synth pads, 80 BPM half-time" — and the AI captures the sonic world without copying specific songs.
Can I sell beats made with this tool?
Yes. Full commercial rights cover beat-lease sales, exclusive sales, BeatStars uploads, and Splice marketplace inclusion. Original AI-generated compositions, original ownership.
What's the right BPM for hip-hop?
Boom-bap and lo-fi sit at 85–95 BPM. Modern trap and drill are 140–150 BPM half-time (feels like 70–75). G-funk and West Coast rap sit around 95 BPM. Hyperpop rap can push 150–170 BPM straight time.