Bee Righteous Creator Training Day 1 cover featuring a gold bee crest, creator profile silhouette, studio microphone, soundwave, and road representing the path to building an AI music creator profile

Bee Righteous Day 1: Build Your AI Music Creator Profile First

Gary Whittaker
Bee Righteous Creator Training · Day 1

Build Your AI Music Creator Profile Before You Prompt Suno

Your first Bee Righteous mission is not to generate another song. It is to define the artist whose decisions should guide the song.

Suno can turn a few instructions into music within minutes. That speed is useful, but it can also hide the real problem. If the artist, audience, purpose, genre lane, vocal identity, and creative boundaries are unclear, a longer prompt usually creates more detail without creating more direction.

Day 1 is complete when you have an approved AI Music Creator Profile v1.0 and one clear Core Pursuit—not when you have read every guide.
Mission Build the artist before the song
Required output Creator Profile v1.0
Working time Approximately 30–60 minutes
Required guides Three focused free resources
Suno required No
Generating today No
1. Identity
2. Audience
3. Sound
4. Boundaries
5. Core Pursuit
The Day 1 Rule

Start with the creator—not the generator.

A strong AI music creator does more than write prompts. They decide what the song should become, recognize why a result worked or failed, repair weak sections, build a recognizable identity across multiple songs, and explain the decisions behind the work.

The long-term Bee Righteous standard is:

Create it. Diagnose it. Repair it. Reproduce it. Explain it.

You are not expected to complete that entire standard today. Day 1 handles the foundation: define what you are trying to create before you ask Suno—or any AI music tool—to create it.

The common starting point

“What prompt should I use?”

This question starts too late. It assumes the artist, audience, message, sound, and intended result are already clear.

The Bee Righteous starting point

“What should this prompt represent?”

The prompt should represent a defined artist, a listener, a purpose, a musical world, and one song with a clear job.

Related reading: Why Your AI Artist Profile Matters More Than Your Prompt explains why random prompting usually continues until the artist identity becomes clear.

Your Core Pursuit

Decide what you are building now.

Your Core Pursuit is the clearest current statement of what you are trying to build through your music. It is not a permanent promise. It is a working direction strong enough to guide the first project.

A useful Core Pursuit helps you decide:

  • Which songs belong to the artist.
  • Which ideas should wait.
  • Which voices and performances fit.
  • Which genre decisions support the identity.
  • Which themes should return across the catalog.
  • What the first song must prove.
I am building [artist or project] to create [type of music] for [intended audience], centred on [themes or purpose], using [genre, vocal, and sonic identity], so the listener will [feel, remember, understand, or do something].
Example

I am building a faith-driven reggae artist project for adults rebuilding their lives, centred on courage, responsibility, and spiritual resistance, using a deep Jamaican baritone, female soul responses, militant rhythm, and memorable communal hooks, so listeners feel challenged to move.

Do not turn the Core Pursuit into a list of everything you may create someday. It should guide the first serious project in front of you.

Choose Your Access Route

Every creator completes the same foundation. The support level changes.

Free users, VIP Plus buyers, AI Training Access subscribers, and Complete Access subscribers all need a clear artist identity. What changes is the training depth, current files, active updates, tools, prompt support, and guidance available through each route.

Already purchased access? Use the Member Access Hub before buying anything again.

Required for Everyone

Complete these three guides—in this order.

JackRighteous.com offers a wider AI Song Development System, but Day 1 uses only the first three foundation resources. The order matters.

Required Guide 1

AI Artist Identity Starter Kit

Define the artist or project, intended audience, emotional territory, vocal identity, recurring themes, and creative boundaries.

Required Guide 2

AI Genre & Sound Direction Kit

Choose a primary genre, supporting influence, emotional direction, vocal feel, sonic palette, production texture, energy range, and avoid list.

Required Guide 3

AI Song Intent & Positioning Kit

Define what the first song is trying to do, who it is for, what the listener should experience, and where the track may eventually belong.

Your Day 1 order: identity first, sound direction second, song intent third. Do not reverse the sequence because prompting feels more exciting.

Prefer to see the full free sequence in one place? Use the Find Your Sound Starter Guides collection, but return to this article and complete only the three Day 1 resources.

Route 1 · Free Users

Complete the profile manually.

You do not need paid access or an AI assistant to complete Day 1. The free route is complete when your own answers have been combined into one usable profile.

Step 1

Define the artist

  • Artist or project name
  • One-sentence identity
  • Intended audience
  • Central purpose
  • Emotional territory
  • Vocal identity
  • Recurring themes
  • Creative boundaries
Step 2

Define the sound lane

  • One primary genre
  • No more than two supporting influences
  • Three sonic pillars
  • One rhythmic principle
  • One vocal principle
  • Three elements to avoid
Step 3

Define the first song’s role

  • Who the song is for
  • What it should communicate
  • What the listener should remember
  • What emotional movement should occur
  • What the song should prove about the artist
Step 4

Write and save the Core Pursuit

Combine the strongest approved answers into one paragraph and save the full document as:

ArtistName_Creator_Profile_v1

Free-route completion: You can explain who the artist is, who the music serves, what should remain recognizable, and what the first song is supposed to prove.

Route 2 · VIP Plus

Use the current library to strengthen—not expand—the profile.

VIP Plus is a one-time current-library route. It includes the current VIP Plus content and tools available at purchase, VIP Prompt Support Blog access under the current terms, and written consultation during the first 30 days after purchase.

VIP Plus does not include automatic future content updates. Eligible automatic updates belong to the active subscription routes where listed.

Your Day 1 order
  1. Complete the three free foundation guides.
  2. Open only the identity, genre, sound, or artist-direction material relevant to this mission.
  3. Compare the deeper material against your original answers.
  4. Resolve contradictions instead of adding more directions.
  5. Save Creator Profile v1.0.
Use your 30-day consultation well

Before requesting written guidance, prepare:

  • Artist or project name
  • Current Core Pursuit
  • Primary genre lane
  • Intended audience
  • Main uncertainty
  • One decision you need help making

VIP Plus gives you more content. Day 1 does not require you to open all of it. Use the current library only to make the profile clearer.

Route 3 · AI Training Access

Turn your completed answers into an AI-assisted working profile.

AI Training Access is the guided online training subscription across Find Your Sound, Find Your Voice, and Find Your Brand. Eligible online-training updates and included subscriber-file updates are available where listed while access remains active.

For Day 1, complete the same three free guides first. Then paste your answers into ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, or another capable assistant and use the prompt sequence below.

AI rule: The assistant may organize, question, compare, and condense your answers. It must not invent the artist.

AI may help with
  • Organizing your completed answers
  • Marking missing information
  • Identifying contradictions
  • Testing whether the Core Pursuit is clear
  • Turning approved decisions into working guardrails
You must correct
  • Invented audiences
  • Added genres or values
  • Generic marketing language
  • Claims you did not make
  • Any version of the artist that feels narrower or different than intended

The final document should be labelled: Reviewed and approved by the creator.

Route 4 · Complete Access

Use the widest active system without widening the Day 1 mission.

Complete Access is the active subscription route for eligible training, current included content, tools and downloads, updated versions, eligible additions, and written guidance where listed while access remains active.

Complete Access members should complete the free profile foundation, use the AI-assisted prompt sequence, and save the approved result inside the current project record or creator system available through their access.

Complete Access workflow
  1. Complete the three free Day 1 guides.
  2. Confirm that you are using the current included versions.
  3. Run the AI-assisted profile prompts.
  4. Review and approve every major field.
  5. Save Creator Profile v1.0 and the unresolved questions.
  6. Select one first Core Pursuit project.
Do not open yet

Do not move into the prompt bank, release records, product systems, or broader tools merely because they are available. Day 1 is still one identity, one pursuit, and one first-song mission.

AI-Assisted Profile Prompts

Use these prompts one at a time.

Replace the bracketed material with your own completed answers. Review every result before continuing. These prompts are most relevant to AI Training Access and Complete Access members, but any creator may use them with a capable assistant.

Prompt 1: Organize my creator profile
I am completing Day 1 of Bee Righteous Creator Training.

Below are my answers from the AI Artist Identity Starter Kit, AI Genre & Sound Direction Kit, and AI Song Intent & Positioning Kit.

Organize only the information I provided into these sections:

1. Artist or project identity
2. Intended audience
3. Core purpose
4. Primary genre lane
5. Secondary influences
6. Emotional territory
7. Vocal direction
8. Sonic pillars
9. Recurring themes
10. Creative boundaries
11. First-song pursuit

Do not invent missing information. Mark unclear or missing fields as [NEEDS MY INPUT].

My answers:
[PASTE YOUR COMPLETED ANSWERS]
Prompt 2: Find contradictions without deciding for me
Review my AI music creator profile for contradictions.

Look for conflicts between:

- Artist identity and intended audience
- Genre and emotional purpose
- Vocal direction and lyrical perspective
- Sonic pillars and creative boundaries
- Core purpose and first-song pursuit

For each conflict:

1. Quote or summarize the conflicting statements.
2. Explain why they may pull the project in different directions.
3. Ask me one specific question that will help me choose.
4. Do not resolve the conflict for me.

Here is my current profile:
[PASTE PROFILE]
Prompt 3: Draft three Core Pursuit options
Using only my approved creator-profile information, draft three versions of my Core Pursuit statement.

Each version must explain:

- What artist or project I am building
- What type of music I intend to create
- Who the music is for
- What themes or purpose guide it
- Which sonic or vocal qualities should remain recognizable
- What I want the listener to feel, remember, understand, or do

Version 1: clear and practical
Version 2: emotionally direct
Version 3: suitable for an internal creator brief

Do not add claims, audiences, genres, values, or goals that I did not provide.

My approved profile:
[PASTE PROFILE]
Prompt 4: Create practical artist guardrails
Turn my approved profile into a practical creative guardrail sheet.

Create:

1. Five elements that should usually remain consistent
2. Five elements that may change from song to song
3. Five warning signs that a song is drifting away from the artist
4. Three questions I should ask before keeping a generation
5. A short “This artist is not...” section

Use only my approved profile. Do not make the artist narrower than I intended.

Profile:
[PASTE PROFILE]
Prompt 5: Prepare the first-song mission
Help me define one first-song pursuit from my approved AI music creator profile.

Do not write the lyrics or the Suno style prompt yet.

Create a short creative brief containing:

- Song purpose
- Intended listener
- Speaker
- Central idea
- Emotional starting point
- Emotional destination
- What the listener should remember
- Genre lane
- Vocal direction
- Three required sonic elements
- Three elements to avoid
- The single question this first song must answer

Mark anything that still requires my decision.

Approved creator profile:
[PASTE PROFILE]

Do not accept an AI-generated profile because it sounds polished. Accept it only when it accurately represents decisions you understand and approve.

Creator Profile v1.0

Save the result in one clean document.

Your profile should be short enough to use and specific enough to guide decisions. It is a control document—not a public biography.

Artist or project name[Your answer]
Artist identity statement[Your answer]
Core Pursuit[Your answer]
Intended audience[Your answer]
Primary genre[Your answer]
Secondary influences[Your answer]
Emotional territory[Your answer]
Vocal identity[Your answer]
Three sonic pillars[Your answer]
Recurring themes[Your answer]
Creative boundaries[Your answer]
What this artist is not[Your answer]
First-song mission[Your answer]
Questions still unresolved[Your answer]
Profile version and dateCreator Profile v1.0 · [Date]
Identity Controls

Choose three sonic pillars and clear creative boundaries.

Three sonic pillars

Sonic pillars are repeatable traits that help songs feel connected. They are not a complete style prompt.

  • Deep, grounded baritone lead
  • Percussive low-end movement
  • Female soul responses
  • Sparse verses with larger communal hooks
  • Warm acoustic or analog textures
  • Cinematic strings around intimate vocals

Choose only three.

Creative boundaries

Boundaries define what should not pull the artist away from the Core Pursuit.

  • No novelty or parody tone
  • No childlike lead vocal
  • No random genre shift that weakens the message
  • No crowded choir unless the song requires it
  • No lyrics that contradict the artist’s values
  • No imitation of a named performer

Do not choose ten sonic pillars. A long feature list is not the same as a recognizable identity.

The First-Song Mission

Choose one song that can test the profile.

Day 1 does not require a final title, complete lyrics, Suno prompt, artwork, release date, distribution plan, or monetization strategy. It requires a song mission clear enough to test whether the artist identity works in practice.

Field What to decide
Purpose Why this song should exist now.
Listener Who should recognize themselves in it.
Speaker Who is delivering the message and from what position.
Central idea The truth, conflict, declaration, question, or story at the centre.
Emotional movement Where the song begins emotionally and where it should arrive.
Memory What the listener should remember after the song ends.
Musical world Primary genre, vocal direction, three required elements, and three exclusions.
Proof What this song must demonstrate about the artist.
Day 1 Completion Test

Do not advance because you finished reading.

I defined one artist or project.
I identified the intended audience.
I wrote one Core Pursuit.
I selected one primary genre lane.
I limited secondary influences.
I chose three sonic pillars.
I defined the vocal identity.
I identified recurring themes.
I documented creative boundaries.
I chose one first-song mission.
I saved Creator Profile v1.0.
I know what I am not doing yet.

Can you answer these seven questions without opening another guide?

  1. Who is the artist?
  2. Who is the music for?
  3. Why does the music exist?
  4. What should remain recognizable?
  5. What does not belong?
  6. What is the Core Pursuit?
  7. What is the first song supposed to prove?

If the answer is yes, Day 1 is complete. Save the profile and stop. More reading is not required today.

Not Yet

The rest of the free system becomes useful later.

These resources are not being hidden. They are being placed where they become useful. Open them after the Day 1 profile and Core Pursuit are complete.

After Day 1: AI Song Structure Starter Kit

Use this when you are ready to decide what each section of the first song should do.

Open the AI Song Structure Starter Kit

After structure: AI Prompt Foundation Kit

Use this when identity, sound, intent, and structure are ready to become controlled prompt inputs.

Open the AI Prompt Foundation Kit

After generating: AI Version Strategy Starter Kit

Use this when you have versions to compare and need a keep, refine, or discard system.

Open the AI Version Strategy Starter Kit

After choosing a promising version: AI Song Improvement System

Use this when you need to diagnose one main weakness and apply one targeted fix.

Open the AI Song Improvement System

Before calling the track ready: AI Track Validation Checklist

Use this as the final keep, refine, rework, or discard gate.

Open the AI Track Validation Checklist

The full system follows a deliberate sequence: define the artist, define the sound, define the song’s job, build the structure, translate decisions into prompts, manage versions, improve the strongest result, and validate the track.

Six Stop Signs

Use these when the training starts becoming another distraction.

Do not write a longer prompt to hide an unclear artist.

Do not choose five primary genres because narrowing feels uncomfortable.

Do not let ChatGPT invent the artist.

Do not begin an album before one song tests the identity.

Do not move into distribution because one generation sounds finished.

Do not confuse reading the training with completing the mission.

Day 1 Final Step

Build the artist. Define the pursuit. Then direct the song.

The Bee Righteous path does not begin with asking Suno for a song. It begins with deciding who is creating, who the music serves, what should remain recognizable, and why the first song deserves to exist.

Save Creator Profile v1.0. Keep the Core Pursuit visible. Then move to the next mission only when the profile can guide one first-song brief.

Bee Righteous Creator Training Day 1 cover featuring a gold bee crest, creator profile silhouette, studio microphone, soundwave, and road representing the path to building an AI music creator profileEducational creator training only. No guaranteed creative, platform, audience, legal, copyright, or financial result.

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