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 Techno 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

Techno styles you can generate

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

Berlin Warehouse

Raw, stripped-back 130 BPM tracks. Pounding kick, hissing hats, distorted analog stabs. Built for 6 AM peak time at Berghain-style basements.

Industrial Techno

Aggressive 140 BPM. Distorted 909 kicks, metallic percussion, sirens, broken textures. Inspired by Surgeon, Perc, and the harder Birmingham sound.

Melodic Techno

Emotional 122–126 BPM with long Moog-style arpeggios and lush pads. Tale Of Us and Innellea territory — slow builds, euphoric drops.

Dub Techno

Spacious 120 BPM. Echoing chord stabs, deep sub bass, tape hiss. Basic Channel atmosphere — minimal elements, infinite reverb tails.

Acid Techno

Squelching TB-303 lines over relentless 135 BPM grooves. Filter sweeps, resonant screams, classic 1990s rave energy.

Hypnotic Minimal

Repetitive 128 BPM loops that shift one element at a time. Donato Dozzy and Voices From The Lake — patience as a weapon.

Made for

Who uses techno music?

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

DJs

Custom warm-up tools, peak-time bombs, and closing tracks tailored to your set. Generate transitions and edits that fit between your favorite records.

Visual Artists

Backing tracks for AV shows, projection mapping, and generative visuals. Match the BPM of your video frame rate exactly.

Cyberpunk Game Devs

Neon-lit nightclub scenes, hacking sequences, dystopian chase music. Loop-ready stems for interactive layers.

Fashion Film Editors

Runway videos, lookbook reels, editorial fashion content. Cold, polished tracks that make any outfit look expensive.

Reels Creators

Underground aesthetic clips, gym reels, motorcycle edits. Punchy 15-second loops with the BPM dialed for your cut.

Producers

Reference tracks, A/B mixing checks, sample-pack starters. Generate clean techno templates to learn arrangement and sound design.

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

How do you prompt an AI techno generator for a DJ-ready track?

A techno generator turns a one-line description into a complete, mixable track — kick, groove and full arrangement — instead of a loop you have to chop and arrange yourself. Describe the subgenre and the BPM, and the AI writes intro, build, drop and outro, ready to export as an MP3 and drop straight into Rekordbox, Serato or Traktor.

Original composition matters for DJs specifically because a generated track carries no sample license buried in it — nothing to flag when you upload a set or release on your own label. Every track is composed from scratch, and paid plans include full commercial rights for club play, festival sets, livestreams and label releases.

BPM is the first decision

128 BPM is the safe center for techno generally, but the six styles here spread out from there: melodic and dub techno sit lower at 120–126 for a more emotional, spacious feel, while warehouse and acid climb to 130–135, and industrial techno pushes to 138–145 for maximum aggression. Naming both the style and the BPM in a prompt — "Berlin warehouse techno at 130 BPM" rather than just "techno" — is what gets a usable, DJ-ready result on the first generation.

Getting the drum machine character right

The distinctive character of techno comes from specific drum machines and synths, and naming them pulls the generator toward that sound: "distorted 909" or "analog kick" for warehouse and industrial, "squelching TB-303" for acid, "Moog-style arpeggios" for melodic. Prompts like "raw analog techno" or "hypnotic minimal" also steer the result away from festival-EDM territory and toward the underground sound DJs are actually looking for.

DJ sets, labels and commercial use

Every generation is a complete arrangement — intro, build, drop, outro — so it's ready to mix straight out of the export rather than needing to be chopped into a loop first. Export as MP3, load it into Rekordbox, Serato or Traktor, and play it commercially at clubs, festivals or on livestreams: full commercial rights are included on paid plans, and because nothing in the track is sampled, there's no clearance question to answer before releasing it on your own label.

Generate your next warehouse weapon

Describe the vibe. The AI builds the loop. Mix it in tonight.

Free to try · No credit card required

Keep exploring

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FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

What BPM should I use for techno?

128 BPM is the safe center for most modern techno. Use 122–126 for melodic and deep techno, 130–135 for warehouse and acid, and 138–145 for harder industrial and hard techno.

Can I generate full DJ-ready tracks?

Yes. Each generation gives you a complete arrangement with intro, build, drop, and outro suitable for mixing. Export as MP3 and load straight into Rekordbox, Serato, or Traktor.

Will the kick drum sound like a real 909?

The AI captures the punchy, saturated character of classic drum machines like the TR-909 and TR-808. Prompt for "analog kick" or "distorted 909" to push it harder.

Can I use generated techno in my DJ sets commercially?

Yes. All tracks come with full commercial rights. Play them at clubs, festivals, livestreams, or release them on your own label.

How do I make it sound underground instead of EDM?

Use prompts like "raw analog techno," "Berlin warehouse," or "hypnotic minimal." Avoid words like "uplifting," "festival," or "drop" — those push it toward mainstream electronic.