Trackloom · Song Builder

You have a song idea. Let's make Suno hear it.

There's a gap between what you're imagining and what Suno actually produces. Most prompts don't bridge it — they get ignored, drift genre, or produce something that sounds nothing like the idea. Trackloom builds the recipe the model actually reads.

Free to start. No card required.
Recipe output — ready to paste
Style block

Nocturnal alt-pop with cinematic synth pressure, dry verse intimacy, and a chorus that lifts without turning glossy.

Lyrics
[Verse]
Late train, platform empty, last light gone
[Pre-Chorus]
Almost said it — throat closed on the word
[Chorus]
Platform lights, your shadow and mine
Avoid block

No EDM drop, no oversized pop sheen, no festival lift.

Get started

What's the song about?

Describe the idea — mood, sound, story, or reference. Even a rough sketch is enough to start.

Free to start. No card required.
The problem

The gap is why every prompt feels like a lottery.

You know what the song should feel like. Suno keeps producing something adjacent. The problem isn't your idea — it's that Suno has a specific input format most workflows don't know about.

Method 01

Trial and error in Suno

"sad synth pop, late night drive, broken heart, cinematic"

What breaks Genre drifts on every generation. No control over what "cinematic" means to the model on a given run. You adjust and re-run until something accidentally lands.
Method 02

ChatGPT → copy → paste

"Write a Suno prompt for a melancholy late-night synthpop song with emotional depth and a powerful chorus."

What breaks ChatGPT doesn't know which fields to target, that [Verse] and [Chorus] gate differently, or what an avoid block suppresses. Polished prose Suno ignores.
Method 03

Community examples

Copied from Discord: "[Verse] I walk alone in the neon rain / The city hums a cold refrain..."

What breaks Model drift. Suno's tag behavior has changed across versions. Community examples are a lottery — behavior varies by model and when the post was written.
Trackloom

Builds the recipe Suno actually reads: a style tag targeting timbre and production lane, structured [Verse]/[Chorus] lyrics with composition directives, and an avoid block that actively suppresses genre drift. Three fields. Model-native.

The difference

Trackloom reads Suno like a native.

Most prompt tools treat Suno as a text field. Trackloom knows it's a composition model with distinct input lanes that behave differently from each other.

Section tags gate texture

[Verse] and [Pre-Chorus] don't just label sections — they activate different model behaviors. [Pre-Chorus] produces compressed, forward-moving texture. [Chorus] lifts. Without section tags, Suno invents the structure and it rarely matches your intent.

Avoid block is a suppression filter

The avoid block isn't a style note. It actively suppresses genre drift across generations. "No EDM drop" stops the model from reaching for festival energy even when the style tag gets ambiguous. Most users skip it and wonder why the output keeps drifting.

Mood becomes production texture

"Bruised nocturnal" produces a different result than "dark mysterious" — not because of lyric content, but because Suno maps emotional specificity into production decisions: mic distance, verb tail, tempo restraint. Precision here is control.

Trackloom recipe output ready
Style block

Nocturnal alt-pop with cinematic synth pressure, dry verse intimacy, and a chorus that lifts without turning glossy.

→ Suno's "Style of Music" field. Controls timbre, tempo, and production lane.
Lyrics
[Verse]
Late train, platform empty, last light gone
The clock face reads a time I missed again

[Pre-Chorus]
Almost said it — throat closed on the word

[Chorus]
Platform lights, your shadow and mine
Every train I take is one more line
→ Each tag is a composition directive. [Verse] gates texture differently from [Pre-Chorus].
Avoid block

No EDM drop, no oversized pop sheen, no festival lift, no inspirational resolve.

→ Active suppression filter. Protects tonal intent across every generation.
Plans

Start free. Go further with Pro.

Free gives you enough to build real songs every day. Pro removes the cap and opens every AI provider.

Free

3 song builds per day. No card required.

  • 3 builds per day
  • 1 AI provider included
  • Full style, lyrics, and avoid blocks
  • Trackloom Song Builder
Pro

Pro

Unlimited builds. Every AI provider.

  • Unlimited daily builds
  • 5 AI providers — Anthropic, OpenAI, Google, Kimi, MiniMax
  • Build history
  • Priority support
Upgrade to Pro

Describe your idea. Trackloom builds the recipe.

Free to start. No card. Takes about three minutes.