Orchestral
Music Generator

The full symphony orchestra is the most powerful and versatile instrument ever assembled — 60 to 100 musicians breathing as one. Describe a scene, an emotion, or a sonic vision — and let Music Agent compose an original orchestral piece that fills every frequency with color.

150+ Prompts14K+ Tracks CreatedCommercial Ready
Tunee Music Agent
Create a lush orchestral piece, 100 BPM, Eb major, sweeping strings with French horn melody and harp arpeggios
T
Here's your orchestral piece — warm divided strings sustaining rich harmonies, a noble French horn melody soaring above, with gentle harp arpeggios cascading through the texture.

Kingdoms at Dawn

Orchestral AI

100 BPMEb MajorFull Orchestra
Chatta con Tunee per creare musica...

Orchestral DNA

The four building blocks that define the orchestral sound — tradition, ensemble, forms, and orchestration.

01

Origins & Tradition

The Western orchestral tradition stretches from the 17th-century Baroque ensembles of Corelli and Lully through the Classical symphonies of Haydn and Mozart, the expanded Romantic orchestra of Wagner and Mahler, to the modern film and concert orchestras of today. Each era expanded the ensemble's size, range, and expressive capability.

02

Ensemble Structure

Organized into four families: strings (violin I & II, viola, cello, double bass), woodwinds (flute, oboe, clarinet, bassoon — each often in pairs), brass (French horn, trumpet, trombone, tuba), and percussion (timpani, snare, bass drum, cymbals, xylophone, celesta). A full symphony orchestra fields 60–100 players.

03

Signature Forms

Symphonic forms (four-movement structure), concerto grosso (soloists vs. ensemble), orchestral suites (collections of dances or character pieces), overtures, tone poems (single-movement narrative works), and film cues. Each form balances unity with variety across contrasting sections.

04

Orchestration & Balance

The art of orchestration involves combining timbres for maximum color and clarity. Dynamic layering from solo instruments to full tutti, section doubling for power, contrasting choirs for dialogue, and careful balance between melody, harmony, bass, and rhythm define the orchestral craft.

Explore the Spectrum

Six distinct orchestral traditions — each with its own ensemble size, palette, and artistic purpose.

Romantic Orchestra

50–170 BPM1800–1910

Expanded ensembles with lush harmonies, sweeping melodies, and extreme dynamic contrasts. The golden age of orchestral expression from Tchaikovsky, Brahms, and Dvořák to Mahler and Strauss.

Modern Film Orchestra

60–160 BPM1930s–Present

The orchestra as storytelling engine for cinema. Leitmotifs, Mickey-Mousing, and dramatic scoring techniques pioneered by Korngold, Steiner, Williams, and Zimmer.

Baroque Ensemble

60–140 BPM1600–1750

Smaller ensembles built around basso continuo (harpsichord + cello). Terraced dynamics, ornamental melodic lines, and contrapuntal textures from Bach, Vivaldi, and Handel.

Chamber Orchestra

50–160 BPM1700s–Present

Intimate ensemble of 15–40 players offering transparency and agility. Ideal for Classical-era symphonies, serenades, and modern compositions requiring precision and nuance.

Pops Orchestra

80–140 BPM1930s–Present

Orchestral arrangements of popular music, show tunes, film themes, and holiday classics. Lighter programming aimed at broad audiences, popularized by the Boston Pops and John Williams.

Contemporary Orchestra

40–200 BPM1950s–Present

Extended techniques, graphic notation, aleatoric elements, and electronic integration push the orchestra beyond tradition. Composers like Penderecki, Ligeti, and Adams redefine the ensemble's possibilities.

How It Compares

See how orchestral music stacks up against chamber music, film scoring, and solo performance across key characteristics.

FeatureOrchestralChamber MusicFilm ScoreSolo
Ensemble Size60–100 players2–15 players40–100+ players1 player
Key InstrumentsAll four familiesStrings, piano, windsOrchestra + synths, choirPiano, violin, cello, guitar
Dynamic RangeExtreme — ppp to fffModerate — intimateExtreme — with electronicsLimited — one voice
Typical FormsSymphony, suite, overtureQuartet, trio, sonataCue, theme, underscoreSonata, etude, prelude
Primary UseConcert hall, recordingRecital, salon, studioFilm, TV, games, trailersRecital, practice, recording
Notable ComposersBeethoven, Mahler, RavelHaydn, Bartók, ShostakovichWilliams, Zimmer, MorriconeChopin, Liszt, Casals

Ready-to-Use Prompts

Eight curated prompts covering every orchestral mood — copy one and start creating instantly.

01

Sweeping Romantic Theme

Create a lush Romantic-era orchestral piece at 88 BPM in Db major. Full string section with divided violas, soaring first violins carrying the melody, warm French horn countermelody, and gentle harp glissandi. Build to a rich tutti climax. Mood: passionate and yearning.

RomanticSweeping
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02

Baroque Concerto Grosso

Compose a Baroque concerto grosso movement at 110 BPM in A minor. Concertino group of two violins and cello alternating with the full ripieno strings. Harpsichord continuo, terraced dynamics, and sequential passages. Mood: elegant and stately.

BaroqueContrapuntal
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03

Action Orchestral Chase

Generate an intense orchestral action cue at 150 BPM in E minor. Driving string ostinato in rapid sixteenth notes, aggressive brass stabs, pounding timpani and bass drum, snare rolls leading into cymbal crashes. Mood: relentless pursuit and danger.

ActionIntense
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04

Pastoral Woodwind Serenade

Produce a pastoral orchestral piece at 76 BPM in F major. Oboe and flute trading a folk-like melody over gently rocking string accompaniment. Clarinet fills, bassoon bass line, and a French horn call in the bridge. Mood: countryside tranquility.

PastoralGentle
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05

Triumphant Brass Fanfare

Build a triumphant brass-led orchestral fanfare at 120 BPM in Bb major. Four French horns stating the theme, answered by trumpets and trombones in harmony. Full string support, timpani accents, and a cymbal crash finale. Mood: victory and celebration.

FanfareHeroic
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06

Dark Orchestral Suspense

Create a suspenseful orchestral piece at 65 BPM in C# minor. Low tremolo strings, col legno tapping, muted brass swells, and isolated pizzicato notes. Celesta adding eerie high-register accents. Build tension without resolution. Mood: ominous and unsettling.

SuspenseDark
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07

Chamber Orchestra Serenade

Compose a graceful chamber orchestra serenade at 96 BPM in G major. String orchestra of first and second violins, violas, cellos, and basses. Elegant Classical-era phrasing, Alberti bass patterns in the cellos, and a solo violin cadenza. Mood: refined and joyful.

ChamberClassical
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08

Contemporary Orchestral Texture

Generate a contemporary orchestral piece at 80 BPM in no fixed key. Tone clusters in divided strings, aleatoric wind passages, prepared percussion, and extended techniques (harmonics, sul ponticello, flutter-tongue). Mood: exploratory and abstract.

ContemporaryExperimental
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Where Orchestral Music Lives

Real-world scenarios where orchestral music shines — from concert halls to game studios.

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Film & TV Scoring

The orchestra remains the gold standard for cinematic emotion. Create custom orchestral cues for any scene — from tender love themes to explosive action set-pieces.

Tre Semplici Passi

Dall'idea al brano finito — descrivi, perfeziona ed esporta la tua musica orchestral.

01

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.

02

Perfeziona via Chat

Regola BPM, tonalità, strumenti e struttura attraverso conversazione naturale. Itera fino alla perfezione.

03

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 orchestral con Tunee.

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

Not at all. Describe what you want in plain language — "heroic brass with sweeping strings" or "gentle woodwind melody" works perfectly. The AI handles orchestration, voicing, and balance.

All major traditions including Baroque Ensemble, Romantic Orchestra, Modern Film Orchestra, Chamber Orchestra, Pops Orchestra, and Contemporary Orchestra. You can blend periods for a unique sound.

Absolutely. Request specific instruments, sections, and techniques — "divided violas with muted brass" or "solo oboe over pizzicato strings." Specify BPM, key, dynamics, and articulations.

Tunee's AI produces high-quality timbres that capture the character of acoustic orchestral instruments. Specify articulations like legato, staccato, tremolo, or pizzicato for even greater realism and expression.

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Orchestral Music?

From intimate chamber pieces to thundering full-orchestra works — bring your musical vision to life in minutes.

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