EDM
Music Generator

Harness the raw energy of electronic dance music — pounding kicks, euphoric drops, and infectious rhythms that move the crowd. Describe the vibe and let Music Agent build your track from scratch.

150+ Prompts25K+ Tracks CreatedCommercial Ready
Tunee Music Agent
Create a festival EDM anthem at 128 BPM in A minor with a massive supersaw drop and vocal chops
T
Here's your festival anthem — a euphoric buildup with stacked supersaws crashing into a sidechain-pumped drop with rhythmic vocal chops.

Mainframe Drop

EDM AI

128 BPMA MinorFestival Anthem
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EDM DNA

The four pillars that define electronic dance music — origins, structure, instruments, and sound design.

01

Origins & Rhythm

Rooted in disco and synth-pop of the late 1970s–80s, EDM exploded through 90s rave culture and 2010s festival boom. Built on a relentless 4-on-the-floor kick pattern, typically 120–150 BPM, with offbeat hi-hats driving the pulse.

02

Song Structure

Follows the intro → buildup → drop → breakdown → drop arc. Phrases lock to 8- or 16-bar blocks. Sidechaining the bass to the kick creates the signature pumping effect that dominates modern EDM.

03

Signature Instruments

Software synthesizers (Serum, Massive, Sylenth1), drum machines (TR-808, TR-909), samplers, and effects processors (reverb, delay, distortion). The DAW itself is the primary instrument.

04

Signature Sound Design

Layered supersaw chords for euphoria, wobble bass for intensity, risers and impacts for tension, white noise sweeps for transitions, and frequency modulation synthesis for metallic and evolving timbres.

Explore the Spectrum

Six core subgenres within EDM — each with its own tempo, lineage, and sonic fingerprint.

House

120–130 BPM1980s–Present

The foundation of EDM — four-on-the-floor grooves born in Chicago with soulful vocals, warm basslines, and rhythmic piano stabs.

Trance

128–150 BPM1990s–Present

Hypnotic melodies and long buildups that create euphoric, transcendent experiences on the dance floor.

Dubstep

138–142 BPM2000s–Present

Heavy sub-bass wobbles and aggressive half-time drops that originated in South London's underground scene.

Drum & Bass

160–180 BPM1990s–Present

Breakneck tempos with chopped breakbeats, deep rolling basslines, and roots in UK jungle and rave culture.

Techno

125–150 BPM1980s–Present

Mechanical, hypnotic loops born in Detroit — stripped-back, repetitive, and designed for dark warehouse floors.

Future Bass

130–170 BPM2010s–Present

Lush, wobbly supersaw chords with pitched vocals and emotional melodic drops blending pop sensibility with electronic production.

How It Compares

See how EDM as an umbrella genre stacks up against its most prominent subgenres across key characteristics.

FeatureEDMHouseTranceDubstep
BPM Range120–150120–130128–150138–142
Key InstrumentsSynths, drum machines, samplersPiano, organ, synth bassPads, arps, supersaw leadsSub-bass, reese bass, synths
MoodEuphoric, high-energy, anthemicGroovy, soulful, warmHypnotic, uplifting, etherealAggressive, dark, heavy
Drop StyleSupersaw/electro dropsBassline groove shiftsMelodic breakdownsHalf-time wobble drops
Typical UseFestivals, clubs, sportsClubs, lounges, radioFestivals, raves, meditationLive shows, gaming, mosh pits
Notable ArtistsMartin Garrix, AviciiDisclosure, FisherArmin van Buuren, Above & BeyondSkrillex, Excision

Ready-to-Use Prompts

Eight curated prompts spanning every corner of EDM — copy one and start producing instantly.

01

Festival Main Stage Anthem

Create a festival EDM anthem at 128 BPM in A minor. Massive supersaw drop, vocal chop hook, 16-bar buildup with snare rolls and rising white noise, sidechain-pumped bass. Mood: euphoric peak-time energy.

FestivalAnthem
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02

Deep House Sunset

Generate a deep house track at 122 BPM in G minor. Warm analog bass, jazzy Rhodes chords, subtle vocal samples, shuffled hi-hats, tape-saturated warmth. Mood: sunset terrace with cocktails.

Deep HouseChill
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03

Progressive Trance Journey

Compose a progressive trance track at 138 BPM in D minor. Layered arpeggios building over 32 bars, lush reverb pads, acid bassline, epic melodic breakdown at 3 minutes. Mood: transcendent night drive.

TranceProgressive
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04

Filthy Dubstep Banger

Produce a heavy dubstep track at 140 BPM in F minor. Growling wobble bass, half-time drum pattern, distorted mid-range reese, massive impact hits, robotic vocal processing. Mood: controlled chaos.

DubstepHeavy
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05

Future Bass Emotions

Build a future bass track at 150 BPM in C major. Pitched vocal chops, wobbly supersaw chords, snappy trap-style drums, lush stereo width, key change in final drop. Mood: bittersweet euphoria.

Future BassEmotional
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06

Dark Techno Warehouse

Create a minimal techno track at 132 BPM in E minor. Driving kick-hat loop, eerie atmospheric drones, acid 303 bassline, industrial percussion, hypnotic 8-bar phrase repetition. Mood: 4 AM underground warehouse.

TechnoDark
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07

Tropical House Vibes

Generate a tropical house track at 110 BPM in B♭ major. Steel drum melody, plucked synth chords, laid-back sidechain groove, marimba hooks, soft claps on 2 and 4. Mood: beach party at golden hour.

TropicalSummer
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08

Drum & Bass Roller

Produce a liquid drum & bass track at 174 BPM in A♭ minor. Rolling Amen break chops, deep reese bassline, ethereal female vocal pads, jazzy piano stabs, half-time bridge section. Mood: late-night city rain.

Drum & BassLiquid
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Where EDM Lives

Real-world scenarios where electronic dance music delivers maximum impact — from festivals to fitness.

🎪

Music Festivals

Main stage anthems, warm-up sets, and closing tracks — EDM is the backbone of festivals worldwide from Tomorrowland to Ultra.

Three Simple Steps

From idea to finished track — describe, refine, and export your edm music.

01

Describe Your Vision

Tell Music Agent what kind of track you want — reference a mood, artist, or scene. No jargon needed.

02

Refine Through Chat

Fine-tune BPM, key, instruments, and structure through natural conversation. Iterate until it's perfect.

03

Export & Use

Download your track in high-quality audio. Fully cleared for commercial use — games, videos, ads, and more.

Explore More Genres

Discover related genres and expand your sonic palette.

Frequently Asked Questions

Everything you need to know about creating edm music with Tunee.

Yes. All tracks generated through Tunee are cleared for commercial use — YouTube, ads, games, podcasts, live events, and more. No royalty fees or separate licensing required.

Not at all. Describe what you want in plain language — "festival banger with a big drop" is enough. The AI handles sound design, mixing, and arrangement automatically.

All major subgenres including house, trance, dubstep, drum & bass, techno, future bass, hardstyle, and more. You can also blend styles — like mixing trance melodies with dubstep drops.

Absolutely. Specify exact BPM, musical key, instruments, and sound design elements. Or leave it open and let the AI choose the best settings for your description.

Most tracks generate in under a minute. You can then refine through conversation — adjust the drop, change the tempo, swap instruments — until it matches your vision exactly.

Ready to Create Your
EDM Track?

From festival anthems to deep house grooves — bring your electronic vision to life in minutes.

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