Explore More: Suno AI Prompts Guide G-I for Music Mastery
Gary WhittakerSuno Prompt Guide • G–I
GET JACKED INTO Suno AI: G–I Prompt Guide
Use these G–I prompt examples to get closer to the right genre lane before you start refining. This guide covers Gabber, Gospel, Grunge, House, Hyperpop, Indie, Industrial, Italo Disco, and more inside the current Jack Righteous Find Your Sound system.
Revision note
Updated May 25, 2026: What changed in this revision
This guide was rebuilt from the older G–I prompt guide into the current Jack Righteous / Find Your Sound article system. The genre prompt examples remain intact, but the article no longer frames itself around older v4-era free-tier workflow language.
Preserved
All original G, H, and I genre entries, beginner-safe prompts, intermediate prompts, and jump-link structure were retained.
Updated
The visible date, system framing, CTAs, and Suno context were updated for May 25, 2026 and Suno v5.5.
Rerouted
The primary next step now points to The Righteous Beat and the AI Music Starter Kit before deeper paid training.
Prompt foundation
How to use these prompts fast and clean
Suno generally responds best when the musical direction is clear: genre, mood, instrumentation, and tempo. If you are writing lyrics in Advanced or Custom workflow, section tags like [Verse] and [Chorus] can help organize lyrical sections and guide energy changes.
Use this public guide for first-pass direction
- Pick 1 anchor style, such as Grunge, House, or Hyperpop.
- Add 1–2 mood words max, such as raw, gritty, smooth, or futuristic.
- Add 3–6 concrete instruments, such as distorted guitars, punchy drums, thick bass, analog synths, or sub bass.
- Set a BPM using the number and “BPM.”
- Generate 2–3 versions, pick the best, then refine with small changes.
Use the system when you need repeatability
This page gives you copy/paste-ready prompt builds for G–I genres. The deeper system is for structure control, intensity mapping, vocal delivery control, consistency workflows, and repeatable release preparation.
Simple rule: if a result feels generic, reduce your prompt to one genre, one or two moods, three to six instruments, and one BPM. Then test again.
Copy and fill
Prompt Builder Template
Use this when you want a strong result without overloading the model.
Template
[STYLE/GENRE], [1–2 MOOD WORDS], [BPM], [3–6 INSTRUMENTS], [optional: mix/era/scene]Example
Hyperpop, chaotic, 160 BPM, glitch synths, heavy bass, pitched vocal chops, bright snare, futuristic bounceGenre prompts
G Tags: Gabber to G-Funk
Use these prompts as starting points, then change one variable at a time.
Gabber
Glam Rock
Gospel
Grunge
G-Funk
Genre prompts
H Tags: Hard Bop to Hyperpop
Use these prompts as stable starting points before adding extra complexity.
Hard Bop
Hard Rock
House
Hyperpop
Genre prompts
I Tags: Indie to Instrumental Hip-Hop
Use these prompts when you want cleaner genre identity before deeper editing or system work.
Indie
Industrial
Italo Disco
Instrumental Hip-Hop
Before you generate
Common mistakes that kill results
Most bad prompt results come from too many competing instructions, not from a lack of creativity.
Over-stacking descriptors
Too many vibe words can average out the sound.
Mixing too many styles
Stacking three or four genres often collapses into generic pop.
Over-instrumenting
Listing twelve instruments can blur the arrangement. Start with three to six.
Forcing everything at once
If you want vocals, complex structure, and heavy FX, build in steps.
Not iterating
Generate two or three versions, pick the best, then refine with small changes.
Skipping the system
Prompt lists help you start. Repeatable results need tracking, comparison, and revision discipline.
Best next step
Turn prompt examples into a working AI music system
If this guide helped you find a better sound lane, stay connected first. The Righteous Beat is where I share new AI music workflow updates, Suno changes, prompt guidance, and creator system notes. Then use the starter kit or deeper training path when you are ready to build with more structure.
Stay connected
Get practical AI music updates and system notes through The Righteous Beat.
Join The Righteous BeatPaid path bridge
Unlock advanced control when prompts alone are not enough
This public page is useful for first-pass genre direction. The deeper training is for creators who want repeatable structure, intensity planning, vocal delivery control, catalog consistency, and release preparation.
What stays public
- Genre examples
- Beginner-safe prompts
- Intermediate prompt upgrades
- Common mistake warnings
What belongs in the system
- Structure control
- Intensity mapping
- Voice and delivery workflow
- Prompt tracking and version discipline
- Rights-aware release planning
May 25 source check
What was checked for this update
This update keeps the prompt guidance evergreen while adding current Suno context. Suno’s current public guide still supports clear prompts built around genre, mood, keywords, instrumentation, and structure tags such as [Verse] and [Chorus] when using lyric structure. Suno’s v5.5 release also adds current personalization context through Voices, Custom Models, and My Taste.
Related guides
Continue through the Find Your Sound system
Use these next when you want more than a genre prompt list.