Experimental
Music Generator
Push every boundary — noise, microtonal tuning, prepared instruments, generative systems, and sonic art. Describe the concept and let Music Agent realize your avant-garde vision.
Objects in Rain
Experimental AI
Experimental DNA
The four pillars of experimental music — rule-breaking, extended technique, microtonality, and chance.
Breaking Rules
Experimental music questions every assumption — fixed pitch, steady rhythm, standard form, and traditional instruments. John Cage, Karlheinz Stockhausen, and Pauline Oliveros opened doors that remain wide open.
Extended Techniques
Prepared piano (objects on strings), bowed cymbals, multiphonics on wind instruments, contact microphones on surfaces, and circuit-bent electronics expand the sonic vocabulary beyond convention.
Microtonal & Spectral
Quarter-tones, just intonation, 19-TET, 31-TET, and spectral analysis of overtones create harmonic worlds outside Western 12-tone equal temperament.
Chance & Systems
Aleatoric (chance) operations, graphic scores, generative algorithms, and process music remove the composer's ego. The system or chance creates the music.
Explore the Spectrum
Six experimental approaches — from structured noise to free improvisation.
Noise
Pure sound, no melody or rhythm. Harsh noise walls (Merzbow) to delicate noise textures (Tim Hecker).
Microtonal
Music using intervals smaller than semitones. Quarter-tones, just intonation, non-Western tunings.
Musique Concrète
Composition using recorded real-world sounds as raw material. Pierre Schaeffer, Pierre Henry.
Drone
Sustained tones with slow evolution. La Monte Young, Eliane Radigue, Sunn O))).
Sound Art
Sound as installation, sculpture, and spatial experience. Site-specific, immersive audio environments.
Free Improvisation
Spontaneous music with no predetermined structure. Derek Bailey, Evan Parker, AMM.
How They Compare
See how experimental approaches differ in pitch, structure, and sonic philosophy.
| Feature | Noise | Microtonal | Musique Concrète | Drone | Free Improv |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pitch | Indeterminate | Microintervals | Non-pitched/concrete | Sustained tones | Variable |
| Rhythm | None/chaotic | Variable | None/collage | None | Spontaneous |
| Sound Source | Electronics, feedback | Retuned instruments | Field recordings, tape | Synths, instruments | Acoustic instruments |
| Structure | Walls of sound/textures | Composed or improvised | Collage, montage | Sustained, evolving | None, emergent |
| Key Artists | Merzbow, Whitehouse | Ben Johnston, Sevish | Schaeffer, Henry | La Monte Young, Radigue | Derek Bailey, Evan Parker |
| Listener Experience | Confrontational/cathartic | Alien harmonies | Transformed reality | Meditative/overwhelming | Unpredictable/intimate |
Ready-to-Use Prompts
Eight curated prompts for avant-garde exploration — copy one and start creating instantly.
Prepared Piano Study
Create a prepared piano piece — bolts, screws, and rubber mutes on strings. Metallic, percussive textures with no fixed tempo. John Cage-inspired timbral exploration.
Microtonal Drift
Generate a microtonal piece using 19-TET tuning. Slowly evolving chords with intervals impossible in standard tuning. Otherworldly and alien.
Urban Concrete
Produce a musique concrète piece using city sounds — subway, traffic, voices, construction. Layered, processed, and arranged into an abstract narrative.
Infinite Drone
Build a deep drone piece with layered sustained tones, beating frequencies, and slow harmonic evolution over 5 minutes. Meditative and immersive.
Noise Sculpture
Create a noise piece with harsh feedback, distortion, and white noise shaped into dynamic contours. Brutal opening that reveals delicate textures within.
Chance Operations
Generate a piece using chance-determined parameters — random pitches, durations, and timbres. Piano, vibraphone, and silence. Cage's Music of Changes spirit.
Spectral Overtones
Create a spectral music piece analyzing and resynthesizing the harmonic spectrum of a cello note. Overtones become melodies, partials become chords.
Circuit Bent Lullaby
Produce a piece with circuit-bent toy sounds, glitching melodic fragments, and warped digital textures. Childlike and disturbing simultaneously.
Where Experimental Music Lives
Real-world scenarios where boundary-pushing music creates unique experiences.
Art Installations
Sound art, gallery installations, and museum exhibits use experimental music for immersive environments.
3가지 간단한 단계
아이디어에서 완성 트랙까지 — experimental 음악을 설명하고, 다듬고, 내보내세요.
비전 설명하기
Music Agent에게 원하는 트랙을 설명하세요 — 분위기, 아티스트 또는 장면을 참조하세요. 전문 용어는 필요 없습니다.
채팅으로 다듬기
자연스러운 대화로 BPM, 키, 악기, 구조를 미세 조정하세요. 완벽해질 때까지 반복하세요.
내보내기 및 사용
고품질 오디오로 트랙을 다운로드하세요. 상업적 사용 완전 허가 — 게임, 영상, 광고 등.
더 많은 장르 탐색
관련 장르를 발견하고 사운드 팔레트를 확장하세요.
자주 묻는 질문
Tunee로 experimental 음악을 만드는 데 알아야 할 모든 것.
Yes. All tracks created with Tunee are cleared for commercial use — art installations, films, games, and more. No royalty fees.
Describe the sonic concept, techniques, and mood — "microtonal drones," "prepared piano textures," "noise wall." The AI understands avant-garde vocabulary.
The AI can generate music inspired by aleatoric and chance principles. Describe the constraint system and the AI will produce unpredictable results within those parameters.
Very much so. Experimental techniques generate unique textures, impacts, and atmospheres that can be used as sound design elements in any production.
Yes. Request specific tuning systems like 19-TET, just intonation, or quarter-tone in your prompt, and the AI will generate music using those pitch relationships.
Ready to Create Your
Experimental Music?
From noise walls to microtonal drones — push every sonic boundary in minutes.
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