Electronic
Music Generator
The full spectrum of electronic music — synthesizers, drum machines, samplers, and digital production. From ambient textures to dancefloor bangers. Describe the sound and go.
Signal Path
Electronic AI
Electronic DNA
The four pillars of electronic music — history, sound design, rhythm, and production technique.
Origins & Evolution
From Kraftwerk and Tangerine Dream in the 1970s through acid house, rave, IDM, and modern EDM. Electronic music constantly reinvents itself through new technology and subcultures.
Sound Design
Synthesis is the core skill — subtractive, FM, wavetable, granular, and additive. Sound designers sculpt timbres from oscillators, filters, envelopes, and effects to create unique sonic identities.
Rhythm & Sequencing
Drum machines (TR-808, TR-909), step sequencers, and DAW programming create rhythmic foundations. Patterns range from four-on-the-floor to complex polyrhythmic grids.
Production Techniques
Sidechain compression, layering, automation, spatial effects (reverb, delay), sampling, resampling, and arrangement are the tools that shape electronic music's sonic landscape.
Explore the Spectrum
Six electronic styles — from cerebral IDM to punishing industrial.
IDM
Intelligent dance music. Complex rhythms, abstract sound design. Aphex Twin, Autechre, Boards of Canada.
Downtempo
Relaxed electronic music with organic textures. Thievery Corporation, Bonobo, Emancipator.
Breakbeat
Syncopated drum breaks rather than four-on-the-floor. Chemical Brothers, Fatboy Slim, The Prodigy.
Drum and Bass
Fast breakbeats with heavy sub-bass. Goldie, LTJ Bukem, Andy C, Noisia.
Synthpop
Synth-driven pop with catchy melodies. Depeche Mode, Pet Shop Boys, Erasure.
Industrial
Harsh, mechanical sounds with distorted textures. Nine Inch Nails, Throbbing Gristle, Ministry.
How It Compares
See how broad electronic music relates to specific dance and listening genres.
| Feature | Electronic (broad) | EDM | Ambient | House | Techno |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BPM Range | 60–180+ | 120–150 | 60–90 | 118–135 | 120–150 |
| Focus | Sound design, experimentation | Danceability, drops | Texture, atmosphere | Groove, 4/4 beat | Hypnotic repetition |
| Structure | Varies widely | Build-drop-build | Freeform, evolving | Loop-based, steady | Loop-based, minimal |
| Audience | Listeners, producers | Festival crowds | Meditators, creatives | Club dancers | Underground clubs |
| Complexity | Low to very high | Medium | Low-Medium | Medium | Medium-High |
| Key Artists | Aphex Twin, Bonobo | Skrillex, Martin Garrix | Brian Eno, Stars of the Lid | Disclosure, Kerri Chandler | Jeff Mills, Richie Hawtin |
Ready-to-Use Prompts
Eight curated prompts covering every electronic style — copy one and start creating instantly.
IDM Journey
Create an IDM track at 130 BPM in F# minor. Glitchy breakbeats, granular synthesis pads, evolving timbres, unexpected rhythmic shifts. Aphex Twin-inspired complexity.
Downtempo Chill
Generate a downtempo electronic piece at 85 BPM in D minor. Organic textures, vinyl crackle, warm pads, gentle beats, and a melancholic flute sample.
Breakbeat Energy
Produce a breakbeat track at 135 BPM in A minor. Chopped Amen break, acid bass, big synth stabs, high energy. Chemical Brothers meets The Prodigy.
DnB Roller
Build a liquid drum and bass track at 174 BPM in E minor. Rolling breaks, deep sub-bass, lush pads, smooth atmospheric vibes. LTJ Bukem style.
Synthpop Hit
Create a synthpop track at 120 BPM in G major. Catchy vocal melody, bright synth chords, punchy drums, anthemic chorus hook. Radio-ready and polished.
Industrial Grind
Generate an industrial electronic track at 125 BPM in C minor. Distorted kicks, harsh noise textures, mechanical rhythms, dark atmosphere. Nine Inch Nails energy.
Modular Experiment
Create an experimental electronic piece using modular synth-inspired generative patches. Evolving sequences, random modulation, no fixed BPM, textural exploration.
Electronic Pop Crossover
Produce an electronic-pop track at 110 BPM in Bb major. Warm synth chords, catchy hooks, four-on-the-floor with sidechain bass, polished and accessible.
Where Electronic Music Lives
Real-world scenarios where electronic music drives creativity and energy.
DJ Sets & Club Nights
Generate tracks across electronic subgenres for DJ sets, club nights, and festival stages.
Three Simple Steps
From idea to finished track — describe, refine, and export your electronic 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 electronic music with Tunee.
Yes. All tracks created with Tunee are cleared for commercial use — games, films, streams, ads, and more. No royalty fees.
Electronic music is the broad parent genre covering everything from ambient to industrial. EDM specifically refers to high-energy dance music designed for festivals and clubs.
Yes. Request FM synthesis, granular textures, analog warmth, wavetable leads, or any specific synth character in your prompt.
Electronic music spans 60–180+ BPM. Ambient is 60–90, downtempo 70–110, house/techno 118–150, and drum and bass 160–180.
Absolutely. Electronic-acoustic fusions work beautifully — add piano, guitar, strings, or live drums to any electronic foundation.
Ready to Create Your
Electronic Music?
From ambient textures to breakbeat energy — bring your electronic vision to life in minutes.
Start Creating Now