AI Music Creation Basics: The ABCs of Building a Sound
Gary Whittaker```html
Before You Create It • The ABCs Series
If You Want to Create AI Music, Learn the ABCs of Sound
AI can help you generate songs faster, but speed does not automatically give you a sound worth building around. Before you create AI music, learn the ABCs of Sound: Audience, Blueprint, and Control.
AI made it easier to create music.
That does not mean it made it easier to create music with purpose.
There is a difference.
Anyone can open an AI music tool and ask for a song.
The tool may generate something. It may even sound good for a moment.
But the question is not only whether AI can create a song. The better question is: can you create a sound worth building around?
Where Many AI Music Creators Get Stuck
Many creators generate track after track, but nothing connects.
They chase genres, but do not build identity.
They keep changing prompts, but do not understand what they are trying to control.
They hear something they like, but do not know how to repeat it.
They get a good song by accident, then struggle to make the next one feel connected.
That is not just a tool problem.
It is a sound problem.
Before you create AI music seriously, you need the ABCs of Sound.
The ABCs of Sound
For this article, the framework is simple:
Audience
Who is the music for, and what should it help them feel, remember, or respond to?
Blueprint
What kind of song are you building, and what structure supports the purpose?
Control
What are you trying to guide, review, repeat, improve, or reject?
Audience tells you who the music is for.
Blueprint tells you what kind of song you are building.
Control tells you what you are trying to guide, review, and improve.
This is not about making the process complicated.
It is about giving your AI music enough direction to become something you can build around.
AI music is not just about the prompt. It is about the creator behind the prompt.
A = Audience
Before you create the song, ask who the song is for.
That sounds simple, but most AI music creators skip it.
They start with genre. They start with mood. They start with random words in a prompt box.
They start with whatever style feels exciting that day.
But audience comes before genre.
Not because every song needs to be commercial.
Not because every song needs to chase trends.
Not because every song needs to be made for everyone.
Audience matters because music is received by someone.
Even if the song begins as personal expression, it still lands somewhere.
When you do not know the audience, your song can become too vague.
It may sound nice, but not connect.
It may use the right genre label, but miss the emotional reason someone would replay it.
It may have a good beat, but no clear listener.
A Better Starting Question
Who needs this song?
Not in a fake marketing way.
In a real creative way.
Those answers matter because they change the sound.
“Create a gospel reggae song.”
“Create a gospel-reggae song for people who feel tired by life but still want to stand in faith. The song should feel warm, steady, hopeful, and strong enough to sing along with.”
Now the music has a listener.
Now the sound has a job.
The creator is not just asking for a style.
The creator is giving the song a reason to exist.
That is Audience.
B = Blueprint
Once you know who the song is for, you need a blueprint.
A blueprint is not the final song.
It is the plan for what the song should become.
This matters because AI music tools can generate full tracks quickly, but speed can hide weak structure.
Blueprint helps you think before you generate.
Blueprint Questions
A blueprint does not need to be long.
It just needs to be clear.
A Simple AI Music Blueprint
Who is this song for?
What should the listener feel?
What sound world are we starting from?
How should the song move?
Who is delivering the message and how?
Does the song stay steady, build, explode, soften, or transform?
What must be present?
What should the song avoid?
That is enough to improve most AI music prompts immediately.
“Make a motivational reggae gospel song with drums and bass.”
Audience: Listeners who feel spiritually tired but still want to keep moving.
Emotional Aim: Hope, endurance, and renewed courage.
Genre Direction: Gospel reggae with warm bass, steady drums, light organ, and a singable chorus.
Song Structure: Short intro, verse one, pre-chorus lift, strong chorus, verse two, bridge, final chorus with more energy.
Vocal Direction: Lead vocal should feel human, grounded, and encouraging. Not overly polished. Not robotic. Not theatrical.
Energy Path: Start warm and steady. Build toward a final chorus that feels like a small victory.
Non-Negotiables: Clear hook, faith-based message, strong chorus, natural language.
Avoid: Generic worship phrases, cluttered lyrics, overproduced EDM drops, fake choir overload.
That is a blueprint.
It gives the song shape before the tool starts producing.
It does not guarantee perfection.
But it gives you something to judge the output against.
Without a blueprint, every result becomes a guess. With a blueprint, every result becomes easier to review.
C = Control
Control is where AI music gets serious.
Not control in the sense that you can force the tool to obey every detail perfectly.
That is not how AI music works.
Control means knowing what you are trying to guide.
It means knowing what matters enough to review.
It means knowing when to keep, revise, reroll, extend, remix, remaster, or start again.
Many beginners think control means writing a longer prompt.
Sometimes that helps. Sometimes it does not.
A longer prompt is not automatically a better prompt. Real control comes from knowing what you are listening for.
Control is not only about generation.
Control is about judgment.
AI can create options.
The creator must decide what to do with them.
The Problem With Accidental Good Songs
Many AI creators get one song they love.
Then they try to make another one like it.
But they cannot.
Why?
Because they never understood why the first one worked.
They liked the result, but they did not capture the sound logic.
So the next prompt becomes a guessing game.
That is why control matters.
When Something Works, Ask Why
If you cannot answer those questions, you may still enjoy the song.
But it will be harder to build a sound.
Control means learning from what works.
What AI Music Creators Should Actually Control
You do not need to control everything at once.
Start with the major elements.
1. Message
What is the song saying?
This matters more than many creators realize.
A song can have a good beat and still say nothing memorable.
Before generating, define the core message in one sentence.
“This song is about refusing to give up when faith is the only thing still holding you together.”
2. Hook
What should people remember?
The hook is not always just the chorus lyric.
It can be a phrase, a rhythm, a chant, a melody shape, a title, or an emotional turn.
If the hook is weak, the song may not stick.
3. Vocal Feel
Who is delivering the song?
A soft worship vocal creates one kind of experience.
A gritty reggae lead creates another.
A gospel choir creates another.
A spoken-word bridge creates another.
A dancehall-style delivery creates another.
Do not just ask for vocals. Describe the role of the voice.
“Lead vocal should feel like someone who has been through the fire but is still standing.”
4. Genre Fusion
What sound world are you building?
Genre labels are useful, but they can also become lazy.
“Reggae gospel” is a start.
But what kind?
The more clearly you understand the fusion, the better you can judge whether the output fits.
5. Structure
How should the song move?
AI songs can sometimes feel like they are moving, but not developing.
A strong structure gives the listener a path.
But the structure should serve the song.
A short social media song may need a hook faster.
A worship song may need space.
A protest song may need urgency.
A storytelling song may need clearer verses.
6. Repeatability
Can this sound connect to your next song?
This is where AI music becomes more than a one-off experiment.
If you want to build an artist identity, a project, a playlist, a series, or a release strategy, you need repeatability.
That does not mean every song sounds the same.
It means your songs share enough identity that people can recognize the world you are building.
When these elements connect, the music starts becoming a body of work.
That is the beginning of sound identity.
The Difference Between Making Songs and Finding Your Sound
Making songs is easy now.
Finding your sound is still work.
That is one of the biggest truths AI music creators need to understand.
AI can help you make more music.
But more music does not automatically become a catalog.
More music does not automatically build a listener base.
More music does not automatically create trust.
More music does not automatically make your artist identity clearer.
Finding your sound requires listening, choosing, refining, documenting, and repeating.
Ask Better Questions
That last question matters.
AI can make almost anything.
That does not mean everything belongs in your sound.
Sometimes growth means choosing less.
A Practical ABC Example for AI Music
Let’s say you want to create a song about standing firm when life gets heavy.
“Make a powerful Christian reggae song about not giving up.”
That may work once in a while.
But it is not a strong creative direction.
This song is for people who are tired, under pressure, and trying to keep their faith alive without pretending life is easy.
The song should blend roots reggae warmth with gospel conviction. It should start steady, build into a singable chorus, and end with a feeling of strength. The lyrics should be plainspoken, not churchy for the sake of sounding religious. The chorus needs one memorable line that feels like something people could repeat when they need courage.
After the first version, review the chorus, vocal tone, lyric clarity, emotional build, and whether the song feels connected to a larger faith-based reggae sound. Keep the strongest hook and revise anything that sounds generic.
Create a roots-reggae gospel song for listeners who are tired, under pressure, and trying to keep their faith alive without pretending life is easy. The song should feel warm, steady, and courageous. Use a grounded lead vocal, deep reggae bass, steady drums, light organ, and a chorus that is simple enough to remember. The message is about standing firm when life gets heavy. Avoid generic worship phrases, overproduced EDM elements, and lyrics that sound too polished or fake. Build from personal struggle into renewed strength.
That prompt is not perfect.
But it is much stronger than simply asking for a genre.
Why?
Because the creator has done the ABC work first.
Now the AI has direction.
And the creator has a way to judge the result.
How to Review the First Output
Once the song is generated, do not immediately assume the first version is finished.
Listen once for feeling.
Then listen again for structure.
Then listen again for the hook.
Then listen again for vocal fit.
Then listen again for anything that breaks the illusion.
Review Questions
This is where you become more than a button-pusher. You become the creative director of the work.
The Role of Suno and Other AI Music Tools
This article is not about one tool only.
You may be using Suno, Udio, BandLab, Audacity, a DAW, video tools, or other AI-supported workflows.
The principle stays the same.
The tool can help you create output.
But the creator must supply direction.
In Suno especially, many beginners think the magic is only in the prompt box.
Prompting matters.
But the prompt is only one part of the process.
That is why AI music training should not only teach people what words to type.
It should teach people how to think before they generate.
That is the purpose of the ABCs of Sound.
A Starter Prompt You Can Use
Before asking AI to create your next song, use this prompt with ChatGPT or another writing model first:
I want to create an AI-assisted song. Before writing lyrics or generating a music prompt, help me clarify the ABCs of Sound: Audience, Blueprint, and Control. Ask me one question at a time. Help me define who the song is for, what kind of song I am building, and what I should listen for when reviewing the first output. After that, turn my answers into a clear creative brief and a music generation prompt.
This is important:
Do not rush straight to the song prompt.
Use the model to help you think first.
Then use the music tool to create from a better starting point.
That is how you begin moving from random AI music generation into intentional song development.
Where This Fits in the JR System
This article is part of the Before You Create It: ABCs Series.
The first article explained the universal framework:
Aim
Know what the work is supposed to do.
Build
Create with purpose and structure.
Check
Review before you call it finished.
This article applies that idea to AI music through:
Audience
Give the song a listener.
Blueprint
Give the song a shape.
Control
Give the creator responsibility.
That connects directly to the larger Jack Righteous path: Find Your Sound.
Because the deeper goal is not only to create one song.
The deeper goal is to find a sound you can understand, repeat, improve, release, and build around.
That is where serious AI music creators need to go next.
Final Thought
AI music tools can help you generate songs.
But they cannot decide what your sound should mean.
That part still belongs to you.
Before you create the next track, slow down long enough to ask:
That is the ABCs of Sound.
Audience gives the song a listener.
Blueprint gives the song a shape.
Control gives the creator responsibility.
Once you understand those three things, AI music becomes less random.
It becomes more intentional.
That is how you start moving from making songs to finding your sound.
Excerpt: AI can help you generate songs faster, but speed does not automatically give you a sound worth building around. Before you create AI music, learn the ABCs of Sound: Audience, Blueprint, and Control.
Tags: AI music training, Suno AI, Find Your Sound, AI creator training, Core Squared, Jack Righteous
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