Master Suno AI: A-Z Music Prompts Guide (D-F)
Gary WhittakerWhat changed in this revision: this D–F guide was rebuilt from the January 12 version into the current Jack Righteous / Find Your Sound system. The old Suno v4/free-plan framing was replaced with current Suno v5.5 context. Broken placeholder citation text was removed. The public prompt examples were preserved, and the CTA path now prioritizes The Righteous Beat, the free AI Music Starter Kit, AI Music Core, and Complete Access.
D–F Suno AI Prompt Guide: Dance, Dubstep, EDM, Folk and More
Use this guide to build cleaner Suno style prompts from D through F. The goal is not to stuff more words into the prompt box. The goal is to give Suno a clear genre lane, a tight mood, a usable BPM, and enough instrument direction to create a stronger first pass.
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How to Use These Prompts Fast and Clean
- Pick one anchor style. Start narrow. For example, choose “Deep House” before trying to blend three genres.
- Add one or two mood words max. “Groovy, sophisticated” is clearer than stacking a long emotional list.
- Add three to six instrumentation nouns. Use concrete sounds like house drums, synth bass, smooth chords, strings, or acoustic guitar.
- Set a BPM. Use the number plus “BPM” so the tempo signal is easy to read.
- Generate two or three versions. Pick the strongest version, then make small changes.
- A/B test one change at a time. Change BPM, instrument, or mood one at a time so you can hear what actually moved the output.
Where to put what: use the Style or prompt field for genre, mood, instruments, and BPM. Use the Lyrics box for your lyrics and section labels like [Verse] and [Chorus] when working in Advanced Mode.
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 into the pocket faster.
What this page does not fully reveal: the deeper control system for structure locking, intensity mapping, delivery shaping, edit-chain stability, and release consistency. That belongs in the paid system.
Prompt Builder Template
Use this when you want to build your own prompt without overloading the model.
[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 energyTempo note: BPM is a strong cue, but it is not a DAW lock. Expect close results, then iterate.
Genre Tags: D
-
Dance
Beginner Safe:
Dance, high-energy, uplifting, 125 BPM, synth pads, kick drum, bassline, club feelIntermediate Better:
Dance, high-energy, uplifting, 125 BPM, punchy kick, tight bassline, bright synth leads, stacked claps, big chorus hook, clean club mix -
Dark Ambient
Beginner Safe:
Dark ambient, haunting, cinematic, 50 BPM, drones, low synth, distorted pads, suspenseIntermediate Better:
Dark ambient, haunting, cinematic suspense, 50 BPM, deep drones, low synth rumble, distorted pads, tension pulses, sparse textures, wide reverb space -
Deep House
Beginner Safe:
Deep house, chill, groovy, 120 BPM, synth bass, smooth chords, minimal percussionIntermediate Better:
Deep house, chill, sophisticated, 120 BPM, warm synth bass, deep chords, minimal percussion, tight house drums, subtle vocal chops, late-night vibe -
Dubstep
Beginner Safe:
Dubstep, aggressive, 140 BPM, wobble bass, synth stabs, heavy drums, bass dropsIntermediate Better:
Dubstep, aggressive, hypnotic, 140 BPM, wobble bass, growl synth stabs, heavy drum breaks, massive drops, glitch fills, tight low end, high impact
Genre Tags: E
-
EDM
Beginner Safe:
EDM, anthemic, high-energy, 128 BPM, synth leads, big drums, bass dropsIntermediate Better:
EDM, anthemic, festival energy, 128 BPM, bright synth leads, big drums, sidechained bass, huge drop, euphoric hook, clean wide mix -
Electro Swing
Beginner Safe:
Electro swing, playful, 125 BPM, jazz brass, double bass, house drums, retro feelIntermediate Better:
Electro swing, playful, retro-futuristic, 125 BPM, jazz brass riffs, double bass, house drums, swing bounce, vinyl texture, catchy hook loop -
Emotional
Beginner Safe:
Emotional, deep, soulful, 70 BPM, piano, strings, acoustic guitar, heartfelt toneIntermediate Better:
Emotional, deep, expressive, 70 BPM, grand piano, strings swell, acoustic guitar, gentle drums, intimate vocal feel, slow build, cinematic lift -
Epic
Beginner Safe:
Epic, heroic, cinematic, 100 BPM, orchestral brass, choir, cinematic drumsIntermediate Better:
Epic, heroic, cinematic, 100 BPM, orchestral brass, choir swells, cinematic drums, rising strings, big trailer hits, dramatic build, powerful climax
Genre Tags: F
-
Fado
Beginner Safe:
Fado, melancholic, nostalgic, 90 BPM, Portuguese guitar, acoustic bass, intimate moodIntermediate Better:
Fado, melancholic, nostalgic, 90 BPM, Portuguese guitar lead, acoustic bass, subtle percussion, intimate room feel, emotional phrasing, soft dynamics -
Festive
Beginner Safe:
Festive, upbeat, celebratory, 130 BPM, brass, percussion, upbeat synths, party feelIntermediate Better:
Festive, upbeat, celebratory, 130 BPM, bright brass, punchy percussion, upbeat synths, crowd claps, joyful hook, big chorus energy -
Flamenco
Beginner Safe:
Flamenco, passionate, fiery, 105 BPM, Spanish guitar, hand claps, castanets, dance feelIntermediate Better:
Flamenco, passionate, fiery, 105 BPM, Spanish guitar rasgueado, hand claps, castanets, fast strum accents, dramatic pauses, stage energy, intense groove -
Folk
Beginner Safe:
Folk, warm, storytelling, 90 BPM, acoustic guitar, mandolin, harmonica, simple grooveIntermediate Better:
Folk, warm, storytelling, nostalgic, 90 BPM, acoustic guitar, mandolin, harmonica, gentle percussion, intimate vocal feel, campfire energy
Common Mistakes That Kill Results
- Over-stacking descriptors: ten or more mood words often creates bland, averaged results.
- Mixing too many styles: “EDM + dubstep + rock + orchestral” often collapses into generic pop.
- Over-instrumenting: listing twelve instruments can blur the arrangement. Keep three to six first.
- Forcing everything at once: if you want vocals, complex structure, and heavy effects, build in steps.
- Not iterating: generate two or three versions, pick the best, then refine with small changes.
Simple rule: when results feel generic, simplify the prompt before adding more. Better control usually starts with fewer conflicting signals.
Go Deeper When You Need Repeatable Control
This public D–F guide is enough to help you explore genres and improve first-pass results. The deeper system is for creators who want structure control, intensity mapping, vocal delivery control, consistency workflows, and release-ready discipline.
Start Free
Use the AI Music Starter Kit if you are still learning how your ideas become usable songs.
Download Starter KitPrompt Control
Use the Best Suno Prompts and Meta Tags guides when your problem is placement, structure, or drift.
Read Best PromptsAI Music Core
Use this when you want the broader Find Your Sound path instead of one-off prompt guessing.
View AI Music CoreComplete Access
Use this when you want training plus paid tool downloads included in the strongest access route.
View Complete AccessWhat was verified for this update
Suno’s current public guidance still recommends clear prompts using genre, mood, keywords, instrumentation, and Advanced Mode structure tags like [Verse] and [Chorus]. The older v4/free-plan framing was therefore updated to a general v5.5 workflow note.
Suno v5.5 is also now framed around more personalized creation through Voices, Custom Models, and My Taste. That does not make genre prompts obsolete. It makes clear prompt direction more important because the system has more ways to personalize results.
Official references checked: Suno “How to Make a Song,” Suno v5.5 release notes, and Suno rights/commercial-use help pages.
More Suno AI Prompt Guides
Use the prompts, then stay connected for the next layer
If the D–F guide helped, the best next step is not to collect more prompt lists forever. The next step is learning how to use prompts inside a repeatable AI music workflow.