Ethnic
Music Generator
Explore the world's traditional and indigenous music — from West African djembe to Japanese koto, Andean pan flute to Aboriginal didgeridoo. Describe the tradition and let Music Agent create.
Savanna Drums
Ethnic AI
Ethnic Music DNA
The four pillars of traditional world music — oral tradition, rhythm, tonal systems, and cultural purpose.
Oral Traditions
Most ethnic music traditions are passed down orally across generations. Melodies, rhythms, and techniques are learned through communal practice rather than written notation.
Rhythmic Foundations
Polyrhythm (West Africa), additive meters (Balkans, India), cyclic patterns (gamelan), and call-and-response structures define the rhythmic identities of global traditions.
Tonal Systems
Pentatonic scales (East Asia, Africa), ragas (India), maqam (Middle East), and microtonal systems differ fundamentally from Western 12-tone equal temperament.
Cultural Function
Ethnic music serves ritual, ceremony, storytelling, healing, celebration, and community bonding. Each tradition is inseparable from its cultural context and purpose.
Explore the Spectrum
Six global ethnic traditions — each with its own tonal system, instruments, and cultural role.
West African
Polyrhythmic drumming — djembe, dunun, talking drum. Kora, balafon melodies. Griot storytelling traditions.
Indian Classical
Raga-based melodic system with sitar, tabla, tanpura. Hindustani (North) and Carnatic (South) traditions.
Middle Eastern
Maqam modal system with oud, ney, qanun, darbuka. Quarter-tones and ornamental improvisation.
East Asian
Pentatonic scales with koto, erhu, guzheng, shamisen. Minimalist aesthetics and space between notes.
Andean
Pan flute (siku), charango, bombo drum. Pentatonic melodies with mountain folk rhythms.
Polynesian
Log drums, ukulele, nose flute, choral singing. Rhythmic chanting and dance-driven music.
How They Compare
See how global ethnic traditions differ in scale, rhythm, and cultural function.
| Feature | West African | Indian | Middle Eastern | East Asian | Andean |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Scale System | Pentatonic, heptatonic | Ragas (72+ scales) | Maqam (quarter-tones) | Pentatonic | Pentatonic minor |
| Rhythm | Polyrhythmic 12/8 | Tala cycles (7–16 beats) | Iqa' patterns | Free/sparse | Binary/ternary |
| Lead Instrument | Kora, balafon | Sitar, sarangi | Oud, ney | Erhu, koto | Pan flute, charango |
| Percussion | Djembe, dunun, shekere | Tabla, mridangam | Darbuka, riq, daf | Taiko, piri | Bombo, caja |
| Cultural Role | Storytelling, ceremony | Spiritual practice, raga | Poetry, Sufi devotion | Court music, theater | Harvest, festival, ritual |
| Texture | Dense, layered | Drone + melody + rhythm | Heterophonic | Sparse, contemplative | Melody + drone |
Ready-to-Use Prompts
Eight curated prompts spanning global traditions — copy one and start creating instantly.
West African Drum Circle
Create a West African percussion piece at 115 BPM. Djembe, dunun, and shekere in polyrhythmic 12/8. Call-and-response patterns, building energy.
Raga Meditation
Generate an Indian classical-inspired piece in Raga Yaman with sitar, tabla, and tanpura drone. Start with alap (free), build to drut (fast) gat.
Desert Nights
Produce a Middle Eastern piece at 90 BPM in Maqam Hijaz. Oud melody, ney flute, darbuka rhythm, quarter-tone ornaments. Atmospheric and mystical.
Japanese Garden
Create a Japanese-inspired piece with koto, shakuhachi flute, and subtle taiko. Sparse, contemplative, with silence as a compositional element. Ma (space) aesthetic.
Andean Highlands
Generate an Andean folk piece at 100 BPM in E minor. Pan flute melody, charango strumming, bombo drum, and quena. Mountain air atmosphere.
Aboriginal Dreamtime
Build an atmospheric piece with didgeridoo drone, clapstick rhythm, and sparse vocal chanting. Evocative of the Australian outback landscape.
Celtic-Ethnic Fusion
Create a fusion blending Irish fiddle with West African kora at 100 BPM in D minor. Two traditions meeting, sharing rhythmic and melodic space.
Global Percussion
Produce a world percussion piece layering djembe, tabla, darbuka, and taiko drums. Polyrhythmic conversation between four continents at 105 BPM.
Where Ethnic Music Lives
Real-world scenarios where traditional world music creates authentic cultural connections.
Film & Documentary
Authentic ethnic music brings documentaries, travel films, and period pieces to life with cultural specificity.
Tre Semplici Passi
Dall'idea al brano finito — descrivi, perfeziona ed esporta la tua musica ethnic.
Descrivi la Tua Visione
Di a Music Agent che tipo di brano vuoi — fai riferimento a un mood, artista o scena. Nessun gergo tecnico necessario.
Perfeziona via Chat
Regola BPM, tonalità, strumenti e struttura attraverso conversazione naturale. Itera fino alla perfezione.
Esporta e Usa
Scarica il tuo brano in audio di alta qualità. Completamente libero da royalty — giochi, video, pubblicità e altro.
Esplora Altri Generi
Scopri generi correlati e amplia la tua tavolozza sonora.
Domande Frequenti
Tutto quello che devi sapere sulla creazione di musica ethnic con Tunee.
Yes. All tracks created with Tunee are cleared for commercial use — films, games, documentaries, and more. No royalty fees or licensing issues.
The AI produces music inspired by traditional styles using characteristic scales, rhythms, and instrument sounds. It captures the feel and spirit of each tradition.
African, Indian, Middle Eastern, East Asian, Southeast Asian, Andean, Polynesian, Aboriginal, Celtic, and many more. Specify the region or tradition in your prompt.
Yes. Cross-cultural fusions work well — try "Indian sitar with West African drums" or "Japanese koto with electronic beats." Describe the blend you want.
Not at all. Describe the region, mood, and instruments in plain language. The AI understands cultural references like "Bollywood feel" or "African drum circle."
Ready to Create Your
Ethnic Music?
From West African drums to Japanese koto — bring global traditions to life in minutes.
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