Tess AI’s Music tool lets you create original songs from natural language prompts. You describe genre, instruments, mood, structure, and duration — and the AI generates a track ready to use in videos, presentations, podcasts, intros, musical prototypes, and social media content.
What is the Music Generator
It’s a “music studio” inside the chat:
you describe what you want to hear
you choose (when available) the music generation model
it generates an original track
you refine it with new instructions until you get to the ideal result
You don’t need to know music theory, play an instrument, or use production software. The final quality depends mainly on how clear your prompt is.
Available models
Tess AI can offer different music generation models, for example:
Minimax Music
Google Lyria
Stability Music
ElevenLabs Music
Each model tends to have a different “signature” (timbre, style, vocals, arrangement density, response to prompts). To find the best sound for a project, it’s worth testing the same prompt in 2 models and comparing.

Use cases
Custom background tracks for videos and livestreams
Bumpers and jingles (brand, product, campaign)
Music for corporate presentations
Prototypes of musical ideas (melody, groove, vibe)
Content for social media (short loops, specific moods)
How to use the tool
Activate it in Tess's Chat, choose one of the templates and write a prompt (simple template).
Use this formula:
Genre + Instruments + Mood + Tempo/BPM + Duration + Structure references
Examples:
“Create a smooth jazz instrumental track with piano, bass and drums, melancholic, 90 BPM, 60 seconds.”
“Minimalist electronic soundtrack, synths and dry kick, futuristic atmosphere, 120 BPM, 30 seconds, with a short intro and a light drop.”
When you get the result, keep asking for specific tweaks, for example:
Structure: “Make a 5s intro, then a catchy chorus and an ending with fade-out.”
Energy: “Make the chorus more energetic and the verse calmer.”
Instrumentation: “Remove the sax and add a clean guitar with reverb.”
Mix: “Turn down the drums and bring out the bass.”
Harmony: “In C major” or “tenser, with minor chords.”
Tips for better prompts
Be specific about the goal: “background music for corporate video” vs “music for a party”
Set duration and BPM (even if approximate)
Say if you want instrumental or with vocals
Indicate mood with concrete adjectives: “intimate, soft, cinematic, tense, triumphant”
For social media, ask for a “loop” and an “ending that connects back to the beginning”
Prompt Examples for Music
Corporate “Modern corporate instrumental track, light piano and pads, inspiring and subtle, 100 BPM, 45 seconds, no vocals, ending with fade-out.”
Podcast “Soft ambient lo-fi, light drums with hi-hats, smooth bass, cozy vibe, 80 BPM, 60 seconds, continuous loop, no flashy melodies.”
Short jingle “8-second jingle, electronic pop, catchy hook, 128 BPM, ending with a short impact, no vocals.”
Credits and usage (important)
Music generation usually uses more credits than text responses because it involves audio processing. To optimize, first test with 10–20 seconds and refine the prompt before generating long versions.
Take the opportunity to generate the audio you need, royalty-free, for your campaigns, projects, or other communications.