Reggae Music Generator
Roots, dub, dancehall, and lovers rock — generate authentic reggae with offbeat guitar skanks, deep bass, and one-drop drums. Jamaican-grade groove at 65–95 BPM.
From prompt to finished track
Describe the track
One sentence is enough — genre, mood, tempo, instruments. Start from the Reggae 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.
Reggae styles you can generate
Pick a vibe and let the AI compose. Every track is original — no samples, no copyright headaches.
Roots Reggae
Classic one-drop drum pattern at 75 BPM, deep walking bass, organ bubble, conscious-lyric pocket. Bob Marley and Burning Spear blueprint.
Dub
Stripped-down mix with cavernous spring reverb, tape-delay throws, dropouts, and pure bass-and-drum sections. King Tubby and Lee Perry tradition.
Dancehall
Digital riddim at 90–100 BPM, syncopated kick patterns, sparse arrangement leaving room for toasters and DJs. Modern Kingston club sound.
Lovers Rock
Smooth 75 BPM ballad style, silky vocals, sweet horn lines, melodic bass. UK 70s sound — Janet Kay and Maxi Priest territory.
Steppers
Four-on-the-floor militant kick at 80 BPM, driving bass, urgent horn stabs. Burning Spear and Steel Pulse-era marching reggae.
Ska / Rocksteady
Faster upbeat predecessor at 120 BPM (ska) or 80 BPM (rocksteady). Bright horn riffs, walking bass, snappy skank. 60s Jamaica.
Who uses reggae music?
Creators reaching for a specific mood without a budget for licensing.
TikTok Creators
Beach reels, summer vibes, vacation content. Authentic reggae groove without licensing Bob Marley catalog tracks.
Travel Vloggers
Caribbean trip content, island travel diaries, Jamaica and Barbados footage. Region-accurate scoring per destination.
Restaurants & Bars
Jamaican restaurants, tiki bars, beach clubs. Background reggae playlists without monthly PRO licensing fees.
Yoga & Wellness Creators
Sunset-yoga sessions, beachside meditation, conscious-lifestyle content. Mellow roots reggae for the chill aesthetic.
Brand Marketers
Rum, beer, surf, and travel campaigns. Authentic-feeling reggae without per-track sync licensing.
Game Devs
Caribbean-set games, tropical narrative shorts, island-life simulators. Loopable reggae stems for ambient diegetic music.
Can an AI reggae generator get the one-drop groove right?
A reggae music generator turns a one-line description into a full reggae track — roots, dub, dancehall, lovers rock, steppers or ska/rocksteady — built at 65–95 BPM with offbeat guitar skanks, deep bass and one-drop drums instead of licensed from a catalog.
Reggae is a genre where the drum pattern and bass tone carry almost all of the identity, and those are exactly the things a generic royalty-free track tends to get wrong. Generating an original reggae instrumental from a prompt means the one-drop pattern, the organ bubble and the bass are built for the style you asked for, composed from scratch with no samples and commercial rights included on paid plans.
Prompting the one-drop, the bass and the era
The classic sound comes down to naming the drum pattern and bass tone directly: "one-drop reggae, 75 BPM, organ bubble, walking bass" produces the Bob Marley and Burning Spear blueprint, and "deep walking dub bass" gets the warm, melodic, front-of-mix bass line the genre is built on. Dub strips the mix down further, adding cavernous spring reverb and tape-delay throws in the King Tubby and Lee Perry tradition.
For a faster, digital sound, dancehall riddims at 90–100 BPM use syncopated kicks and sparse arrangements — naming a specific style like "Sleng Teng riddim" or "Diwali riddim" gets era-accurate character. Lovers rock slows to 75 BPM for a smooth, silky-vocal ballad style, steppers pushes a militant four-on-the-floor kick at 80 BPM, and ska or rocksteady speeds things back up to 120 BPM or 80 BPM respectively for the 60s Jamaica sound.
From beach reels to restaurant playlists
TikTok creators and travel vloggers use reggae for beach reels and Caribbean-trip content without licensing Bob Marley catalog tracks, while restaurants, tiki bars and beach clubs run generated reggae as background playlists without ongoing PRO licensing fees. Yoga and wellness creators lean on the mellower roots-reggae end for sunset sessions and beachside meditation content.
Instrumentals ready for your own vocal
Reggae instrumentals leave plenty of space for vocal delivery, so generating an instrumental and toasting or singing over it in a DAW is fully supported. Paid plans include full commercial rights covering restaurants, bars, YouTube monetization, brand campaigns and streaming releases on a track composed entirely from scratch.
Feel the riddim
Choose the style. Pick the BPM. Get an authentic reggae track ready for the speaker.
Free to try · No credit card required
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Frequently Asked Questions
Can the AI generate authentic Jamaican reggae?
Yes. Prompt "one-drop reggae, 75 BPM, organ bubble, walking bass" and the AI produces the classic Kingston sound. Specify roots, dub, or dancehall for the right era.
Will the bass have that classic reggae feel?
Prompt for "deep walking dub bass" and the AI generates the warm, melodic, front-of-mix bass lines reggae is built on. Sub-frequencies hit on club systems.
Can I get dancehall riddims?
Yes. Dancehall riddims at 90–100 BPM with digital drum patterns are fully supported. Prompt sub-styles like "Sleng Teng riddim" or "Diwali riddim" for era-accurate feel.
Are commercial rights included?
Yes. All paid plans include full commercial rights — restaurants, bars, YouTube monetization, brand campaigns, and streaming releases all covered.
Can I add my own vocals?
Yes. Generate an instrumental, download the WAV, and toast or sing over it in your DAW. Reggae instrumentals leave plenty of space for vocal delivery.