GET JACKED into Suno AI D–F Prompt Guide (2026) cover with stylized JR logo and JackRighteous.com branding

Master Suno AI: A-Z Music Prompts Guide (D-F)

Gary Whittaker

GET JACKED with Suno AI: D–F Prompt Guide

✅ Updated June 8, 2025 to reflect Suno AI v4 (Free Plan)
✅ Re-updated January 12, 2026 to improve navigation, UX, and next-step routing
✅ Part of the GET JACKED Into A–Z Suno AI Prompt Guide Series


GET JACKED into Suno AI D–F Prompt Guide (2026) cover with stylized JR logo and JackRighteous.com branding

How to Use These Prompts (Fast + Clean)

  • Pick 1 anchor style (e.g., “Deep House”). Start narrow.
  • Add 1–2 mood words max (e.g., “groovy, sophisticated”). Too many moods can blur results.
  • Add 3–6 instrumentation nouns (e.g., “house drums, synth bass, smooth chords”). Keep them concrete.
  • Set a BPM (e.g., “125 BPM”). Use the number + BPM.
  • Generate 2–3 versions, then iterate from the best one using small changes.
  • A/B test one change at a time (only BPM OR only one instrument) so you learn what’s driving the output.

Where to put what (so Suno listens)

  • Style / prompt field: genre + mood + instruments + BPM (short and specific).
  • Lyrics box (Custom Mode): your lyrics + section labels like [Verse] / [Chorus].

Suno guidance emphasizes using clear musical terms (genre/mood/instrumentation/tempo) and using structure tags like [Verse] / [Chorus] when writing custom lyrics. :contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0}

Instrumental tip

If you want no vocals, include instrumental in your prompt and avoid words like “vocal”, “singer”, “rapper”, or “lyrics”.

What this page gives you: copy/paste-ready prompts that help you get “in the pocket” faster.
What this page does not fully reveal: the deeper tag-stacking + control system used to lock structure, intensity, and delivery for consistent releases (that’s gated on purpose).

Skip straight to D–F prompts →


Prompt Builder Template (Copy + Fill)

Use this when you want to build your own prompt without overloading the model.

Template

[STYLE/GENRE], [1–2 MOOD WORDS], [BPM], [3–6 INSTRUMENTS], [OPTIONAL: song purpose or scene]

Example

Deep house, chill, 120 BPM, house drums, synth bass, smooth chords, late-night lounge energy

Tempo note: BPM is a strong cue, but it’s not a DAW lock. Expect “close-ish,” then iterate. :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}

Before you generate: read the 60-second mistakes list →


Genre Tags: D

Jump to:

Dance · Dark Ambient · Deep House · Dubstep

  • Dance
    Beginner Safe: Dance, high-energy, uplifting, 125 BPM, synth pads, kick drum, bassline, club feel
    Intermediate Better: Dance, high-energy, uplifting, 125 BPM, punchy kick, tight bassline, bright synth leads, stacked claps, big chorus hook, clean club mix
    Back to top ↑
  • Dark Ambient
    Beginner Safe: Dark ambient, haunting, cinematic, 50 BPM, drones, low synth, distorted pads, suspense
    Intermediate Better: Dark ambient, haunting, cinematic suspense, 50 BPM, deep drones, low synth rumble, distorted pads, tension pulses, sparse textures, wide reverb space
    Back to top ↑
  • Deep House
    Beginner Safe: Deep house, chill, groovy, 120 BPM, synth bass, smooth chords, minimal percussion
    Intermediate Better: Deep house, chill, sophisticated, 120 BPM, warm synth bass, deep chords, minimal percussion, tight house drums, subtle vocal chops, late-night vibe
    Back to top ↑
  • Dubstep
    Beginner Safe: Dubstep, aggressive, 140 BPM, wobble bass, synth stabs, heavy drums, bass drops
    Intermediate Better: Dubstep, aggressive, hypnotic, 140 BPM, wobble bass, growl synth stabs, heavy drum breaks, massive drops, glitch fills, tight low end, high impact
    Back to top ↑

Next: E prompts →


Genre Tags: E

Jump to:

EDM · Electro Swing · Emotional · Epic

  • EDM
    Beginner Safe: EDM, anthemic, high-energy, 128 BPM, synth leads, big drums, bass drops
    Intermediate Better: EDM, anthemic, festival energy, 128 BPM, bright synth leads, big drums, sidechained bass, huge drop, euphoric hook, clean wide mix
    Back to top ↑
  • Electro Swing
    Beginner Safe: Electro swing, playful, 125 BPM, jazz brass, double bass, house drums, retro feel
    Intermediate Better: Electro swing, playful, retro-futuristic, 125 BPM, jazz brass riffs, double bass, house drums, swing bounce, vinyl texture, catchy hook loop
    Back to top ↑
  • Emotional
    Beginner Safe: Emotional, deep, soulful, 70 BPM, piano, strings, acoustic guitar, heartfelt tone
    Intermediate Better: Emotional, deep, expressive, 70 BPM, grand piano, strings swell, acoustic guitar, gentle drums, intimate vocal feel, slow build, cinematic lift
    Back to top ↑
  • Epic
    Beginner Safe: Epic, heroic, cinematic, 100 BPM, orchestral brass, choir, cinematic drums
    Intermediate Better: Epic, heroic, cinematic, 100 BPM, orchestral brass, choir swells, cinematic drums, rising strings, big trailer hits, dramatic build, powerful climax
    Back to top ↑

Next: F prompts →


Genre Tags: F

Jump to:

Fado · Festive · Flamenco · Folk

  • Fado
    Beginner Safe: Fado, melancholic, nostalgic, 90 BPM, Portuguese guitar, acoustic bass, intimate mood
    Intermediate Better: Fado, melancholic, nostalgic, 90 BPM, Portuguese guitar lead, acoustic bass, subtle percussion, intimate room feel, emotional phrasing, soft dynamics
    Back to top ↑
  • Festive
    Beginner Safe: Festive, upbeat, celebratory, 130 BPM, brass, percussion, upbeat synths, party feel
    Intermediate Better: Festive, upbeat, celebratory, 130 BPM, bright brass, punchy percussion, upbeat synths, crowd claps, joyful hook, big chorus energy
    Back to top ↑
  • Flamenco
    Beginner Safe: Flamenco, passionate, fiery, 105 BPM, Spanish guitar, hand claps, castanets, dance feel
    Intermediate Better: Flamenco, passionate, fiery, 105 BPM, Spanish guitar rasgueado, hand claps, castanets, fast strum accents, dramatic pauses, stage energy, intense groove
    Back to top ↑
  • Folk
    Beginner Safe: Folk, warm, storytelling, 90 BPM, acoustic guitar, mandolin, harmonica, simple groove
    Intermediate Better: Folk, warm, storytelling, nostalgic, 90 BPM, acoustic guitar, mandolin, harmonica, gentle percussion, intimate vocal feel, campfire energy
    Back to top ↑

Next: the mistakes that cause “generic” outputs →


Common Mistakes That Kill Results

  • Over-stacking descriptors: 10+ mood words often produces bland, averaged results.
  • Mixing too many styles: “EDM + dubstep + rock + orchestral” often collapses into generic pop.
  • Over-instrumenting: listing 12 instruments can blur the arrangement. Keep 3–6 first.
  • Forcing everything at once: if you want vocals + complex structure + heavy FX, build in steps.
  • Not iterating: generate 2–3, pick the best, then refine with small changes.

Want a next step mapped to your stage? →


🐝 Not sure what to do next with these prompts?

If you’re using Suno for content, branding, workflow, or release — take this quick quiz and get routed to the best next step. No signup required.

🐝 Take the AI Music Content Path Quiz (2026) →

🐝 Prefer to skip the quiz? Start here instead:

🍯 Want more creator playbooks (no hype)? Join The Righteous Beat →

See what’s intentionally gated (and why) →


Unlock Advanced Control (What’s Intentionally Gated)

This page is designed to be usable for everyone — but some of the highest-leverage control methods are kept inside paid resources on purpose. That’s where the “repeatable system” lives.

  • Structure control: how to reliably lock intros, hooks, bridges, and builds without prompt collapse.
  • Intensity mapping: how to plan energy ramps so your track evolves instead of looping.
  • Vocal delivery control: how to steer cadence, articulation, and performance without “over-directing.”
  • Consistency workflows: how to keep a series sounding like a series across multiple generations.
  • Tag-stack rules: what overrides what, and what combinations quietly break results.

If you just want to explore, this page is enough to get real progress. If you want repeatability and control, that’s where the system becomes the difference.

Continue through the series →



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