World Music Generator
Indian sitars, Japanese koto, African djembe, Middle Eastern oud, and Latin percussion. Generate AI world music with authentic instruments and regional rhythms.
From prompt to finished track
Describe the track
One sentence is enough — genre, mood, tempo, instruments. Start from the World 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.
World styles you can generate
Pick a vibe and let the AI compose. Every track is original — no samples, no copyright headaches.
Indian Classical & Bollywood
Sitar, tabla, harmonium, and bansuri flute melodies over driving raga patterns. Spans devotional, classical, and modern Bollywood film-score energy.
Japanese Traditional
Koto, shakuhachi flute, and taiko drums in pentatonic phrasing. Patient, meditative scoring with cherry-blossom and zen-garden aesthetics.
African Drum & Rhythm
Djembe, talking drum, kora, and call-and-response vocals at 110 to 120 BPM. West-African polyrhythmic energy and Afrobeat foundations.
Middle Eastern & Arabic
Oud, qanun, darbuka, and ney flute over maqam scales. Mediterranean and Levantine melodic phrasing with hypnotic rhythmic drive.
Latin & Caribbean
Cuban son montuno, salsa horns, bossa-nova guitar, and Brazilian samba percussion. Tropical heat with authentic syncopation.
Celtic & Nordic Folk
Tin whistle, fiddle, bodhran, and Hardanger violin over jig and reel patterns. Misty highland and Scandinavian forest aesthetics.
Who uses world music?
Creators reaching for a specific mood without a budget for licensing.
Documentary Filmmakers
Geographic and cultural scoring for travel docs, history films, and ethnographic projects. Authentic regional flavor without sync clearance.
Travel YouTubers
Background music matched to your destination — sitar for India videos, taiko for Japan, djembe for West Africa. Tonally honest scoring.
Game Developers
Region-specific music for RPG locations, world-map themes, and culturally-rooted level scoring. Generate variants for each in-game biome.
Restaurants & Cultural Venues
Background music programming for ethnic restaurants, cultural centers, and themed events. Authentic regional sound without expensive sourcing.
Educators
Music for cultural-studies lessons, geography modules, and language-learning videos. Geographic flavor that complements teaching content.
Yoga & Wellness Studios
Indian classical for yoga sessions, Japanese koto for meditation, and Middle Eastern oud for breath work. Authentic atmosphere without overused stock loops.
Can AI generate authentic world music instruments?
A world music generator turns a text prompt into a fully composed track built around a specific region's instruments — sitar and tabla for Indian classical, koto and shakuhachi for Japanese traditional, djembe and kora for West African rhythm, oud and qanun for Middle Eastern maqam. Name the region and the model captures its characteristic timbres and phrasing rather than a generic synth approximation.
That regional authenticity is what stock libraries struggle with — a handful of generic "ethnic" loops get reused across every travel documentary and restaurant playlist. Because every track here is composed from scratch for the prompt you give it, a documentary filmmaker or restaurant owner gets a genuinely regional-sounding piece instead of the same recognizable sample everyone else licensed.
Naming the region gets you the instruments
Mention the culture directly — "Indian classical raga," "West African djembe," "Cuban son," "Japanese koto" — and the AI adapts both instrumentation and phrasing. Indian classical and Bollywood cues layer sitar, tabla, harmonium and bansuri flute over raga patterns; Japanese traditional pieces use koto, shakuhachi and taiko in pentatonic phrasing; African drum tracks run djembe, talking drum and kora at 110 to 120 BPM with call-and-response vocals; Middle Eastern pieces build oud, qanun, darbuka and ney flute over maqam scales; Latin and Caribbean cues draw on son montuno, salsa horns, bossa-nova guitar and samba percussion; Celtic and Nordic folk leans on tin whistle, fiddle, bodhran and Hardanger violin over jig and reel patterns.
You can also fuse two traditions in one prompt — "tabla and Western strings" or "oud over electronic beats" — for a hybrid world-music texture that no single sample pack offers.
Where creators put regional scoring to work
Documentary filmmakers use it for geographic and cultural scoring on travel docs and ethnographic projects without sync clearance. Travel YouTubers match music to the destination — sitar for India, taiko for Japan, djembe for West Africa — for tonally honest background tracks. Game developers generate region-specific themes for RPG locations and world-map biomes, restaurants and cultural venues program authentic regional atmosphere without expensive sourcing, educators use it in geography and cultural-studies lessons, and yoga and wellness studios pair Indian classical, Japanese koto or Middle Eastern oud with sessions instead of overused stock loops.
Instrumental tracks and commercial rights
Specify "instrumental, no vocals" or "slow and meditative" for spa, yoga and meditation use. Paid plans include full commercial rights for films, ads, games and online content across all platforms, so a world music generator track can go straight into a monetized documentary or a client project without a separate license.
Travel the world by ear
Describe the region. Generate the music. Cross the border.
Free to try · No credit card required
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Frequently Asked Questions
Does the music feature authentic regional instruments?
Yes. The model captures characteristic timbres of sitars, kotos, djembes, oud, dulcimer, and other regional instruments — not generic synth approximations.
Can I request a specific country or culture?
Yes. Mention the region — "Indian classical raga," "West African djembe," "Cuban son," "Japanese koto" — and the AI adapts instrumentation and phrasing.
Can I blend two cultural styles in one track?
Yes. Request fusion arrangements — "tabla and Western strings" or "oud over electronic beats" — for hybrid world-music textures.
Is world music safe to use in documentaries and ads?
Yes. Paid plans include full commercial rights for use in films, ads, games, and online content across all platforms.
Can I get instrumental-only world music for meditation?
Yes. Specify "instrumental, no vocals" or "for meditation, slow and meditative" for spa, yoga, and wellness use.