Synth
Music Generator
Analog warmth, digital precision, modular chaos — describe your synthesis vision and let Music Agent craft professional electronic textures and melodies in seconds.
Neon Drift
Synth AI
Synth DNA
Four pillars of synthesis — origins, methods, sound design, and the analog-digital-modular spectrum.
Synthesis Origins
Electronic synthesis began with the Telharmonium (1897) and matured through Robert Moog's voltage-controlled synthesizers in the 1960s. The Minimoog (1970) made synthesis portable and musical. From Wendy Carlos's Switched-On Bach to Kraftwerk's electronic pop, synthesizers redefined what music could sound like.
Synthesis Methods
Subtractive synthesis (Moog, Prophet-5) filters harmonics from rich waveforms. FM synthesis (DX7) creates complex timbres through frequency modulation. Wavetable synthesis (PPG Wave, Serum) morphs between waveform snapshots. Granular, additive, and physical modelling synthesis each offer distinct sonic possibilities.
Sound Design Elements
Oscillators generate raw waveforms (saw, square, triangle, sine). Filters shape the frequency content — low-pass, high-pass, band-pass, and notch. Envelopes (ADSR) control amplitude and filter over time. LFOs add movement through modulation of pitch, filter, and amplitude. These building blocks combine into infinite timbres.
Analog vs. Digital vs. Modular
Analog synths (Moog, Prophet, Juno) offer warm, organic imperfections and continuous voltage control. Digital synths provide perfect recall, complex algorithms, and vast preset libraries. Modular systems (Eurorack) let users build custom signal paths with patch cables, creating sounds impossible on fixed-architecture instruments.
Synth Styles
Six major synth styles — from retro synthwave to experimental modular and cinematic scoring.
Synthwave
Retro-futuristic electronic music inspired by 1980s film scores and synth-pop. Pulsing arpeggios, lush pads, and gated reverb drums evoke neon-lit nostalgia. Kavinsky and The Midnight lead the genre.
Ambient Synth
Expansive, evolving synth textures creating meditative soundscapes. Brian Eno's Music for Airports pioneered the form. Slow-moving pads, granular textures, and generative sequences define the style.
Synth-Pop
Catchy melodies and pop songwriting driven by synthesizers. Depeche Mode, Pet Shop Boys, and Chvrches combine electronic production with hook-driven vocals and danceable grooves.
Modular / Experimental
Eurorack and modular systems creating unpredictable, evolving sonic textures. Generative sequences, random voltage, and complex patching produce sounds no preset can replicate.
EDM Synths
Massive synth leads, supersaws, and bass wobbles driving festival electronic music. Supersaw stacks, sidechain-compressed pads, and aggressive filter sweeps define the modern EDM synth palette.
Film Score Synth
Synthesizers in cinematic scoring — from Vangelis's Blade Runner to Hans Zimmer's Inception. Hybrid orchestral-electronic textures, evolving pads, and pulsing rhythms create tension and wonder.
Synth Types Compared
How analog, digital, and modular synthesizers compare to traditional instruments.
| Feature | Analog Synth | Digital Synth | Modular Synth | Piano | Electric Guitar |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tonal Range | Unlimited (oscillator-based) | Unlimited (algorithmic) | Unlimited (patch-dependent) | 88 keys / 7+ octaves | ~4 octaves |
| Sound Variety | Warm, organic, limited presets | Vast presets, precise recall | Infinite, unpredictable | Focused (piano timbre) | Wide with effects |
| Polyphony | Limited (1–16 voices) | Unlimited | Patch-dependent | Up to 10 notes | Up to 6 notes |
| Learning Curve | Medium | Low–Medium | High | Medium | Medium |
| Key Genres | Synthwave, ambient, film | Pop, EDM, hip-hop | Experimental, ambient | Classical, jazz, pop | Rock, blues, jazz |
| Notable Artists | Kraftwerk, Tangerine Dream | Depeche Mode, Chvrches | Suzanne Ciani, Richard Devine | Chopin, Bill Evans | Hendrix, Gilmour |
Synth Prompts
Eight curated prompts covering every synth style — copy one and start creating instantly.
Synthwave Arpeggios
Create a synthwave track at 100 BPM in A minor. Pulsing 16th-note arpeggio on a saw-wave synth, warm pad underneath, gated-reverb snare, side-chained bass, retro drum machine. Mood: neon midnight drive.
Ambient Pad Drift
Generate an ambient synth piece at 60 BPM in E major. Slow-evolving wavetable pad, granular texture layers, long reverb tails, subtle LFO filter movement, no percussion. Mood: floating in zero gravity.
Synth-Pop Hook
Compose a synth-pop track at 125 BPM in G major. Catchy lead melody on a bright digital synth, punchy 808 kick, clap snare, arpeggiated bass line, vocoder harmony layer. Mood: dancefloor anthem.
Modular Generative
Build a generative modular synth piece. Random voltage-controlled sequences, evolving filter sweeps, clock-divided rhythms, resonant feedback patches, organic chaos. Mood: machine dreaming.
Cinematic Tension
Produce a cinematic synth score at 75 BPM in C minor. Dark, pulsing bass synth, distant metallic textures, building rhythmic urgency, brass-like synth stabs, crescendo to climax. Mood: thriller reveal.
Acid Bassline
Create an acid house track at 130 BPM in F minor. TB-303 style squelchy bass with resonance sweeps, 909 kick and hi-hat, minimal arrangement, hypnotic repetition. Mood: underground warehouse.
Supersaw Lead
Generate an EDM synth track at 140 BPM in D minor. Massive supersaw lead for the drop, sidechain-pumping pad, white-noise risers, sub-bass, festival-ready energy. Mood: main-stage moment.
Analog Warmth
Compose a warm analog synth piece at 85 BPM in Bb major. Moog-style bass, Juno-60 pad with slow chorus, gentle sequence, tape-saturation warmth, soft drum machine. Mood: nostalgic comfort.
Where Synth Shines
Real-world scenarios where AI-generated synth music delivers electronic excellence.
Film & TV Scoring
Synth textures and pads create atmosphere for sci-fi, thriller, drama, and documentary — from subtle underscore to full electronic scores.
Three Simple Steps
From idea to finished track — describe, refine, and export your synth music.
Describe Your Vision
Tell Music Agent what kind of track you want — reference a mood, artist, or scene. No jargon needed.
Refine Through Chat
Fine-tune BPM, key, instruments, and structure through natural conversation. Iterate until it's perfect.
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 synth music with Tunee.
Yes. Specify the synth character — Moog bass warmth, Juno pad chorus, DX7 electric piano, or Prophet-5 brass. The AI matches the tonal signature of classic and modern synthesizers.
Absolutely. Request subtractive, FM, wavetable, granular, or additive synthesis textures. The AI generates sounds appropriate to each method's character.
Yes. Request slow-evolving pads, generative sequences, or modular-style patches with filter sweeps, random modulation, and organic movement.
Yes. All Tunee-generated tracks are fully licensed for commercial use — YouTube, ads, games, films, and streaming. No royalties needed.
Of course. Hybrid arrangements combining synth pads with strings, piano with synth bass, or electronic beats with acoustic drums are fully supported.
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Synth Music?
From analog warmth to digital precision — bring your synthesis vision to life in minutes.
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