Brazilian
Music Generator

From the carnival streets of Rio to the intimate clubs of Ipanema — samba rhythms, bossa nova cool, forró warmth, and MPB sophistication. Describe your sound and let Music Agent play.

Samba & Bossa NovaMPB & ForróCarnival Ready
Tunee Music Agent
Create a bossa nova track, 130 BPM, Db major, nylon guitar, cool and intimate
T
Here's your bossa nova — gentle nylon guitar with the signature syncopated rhythm, soft brushed drums, warm bass, and a breezy melodic hook.

Ipanema Twilight

Brazilian AI

130 BPMDb MajorBossa Nova
Chat with Tunee to create music...

Brazilian Music DNA

The four essences of Brazilian sound — rhythm, harmony, melody, and cultural fusion.

01

Rhythmic Complexity

Brazilian music is rhythm-first — samba's surdo-tamborim interplay, bossa nova's syncopated guitar pattern, baião's zabumba-triangle groove. Polyrhythm is in the DNA.

02

Harmonic Sophistication

Influenced by jazz harmony — extended chords (maj7, 9th, 13th), chromatic bass movement, and unexpected modulations. Jobim's harmonic language rivals any jazz composer.

03

Melodic Beauty

Lyrical, singable melodies that flow naturally with Portuguese language rhythms. From bossa nova's understated cool to samba's exuberant joy.

04

Cultural Fusion

Brazilian music blends African rhythms, Portuguese melody, and indigenous elements with jazz, rock, and electronic influences. MPB (Música Popular Brasileira) is the ultimate fusion genre.

Explore the Spectrum

Six pillars of Brazilian music — from bossa nova elegance to baile funk energy.

Bossa Nova

120–140 BPM1958–Present

Cool, intimate fusion of samba and jazz. Nylon guitar, soft vocals, sophisticated harmony. Jobim, Gilberto.

Samba

130–170 BPM1910s–Present

High-energy carnival rhythm — surdo bass drum, tamborim, cavaquinho, cuíca. The heartbeat of Brazil.

Forró

100–140 BPM1940s–Present

Northeastern dance music — accordion, zabumba drum, triangle. Joyful partner dance from the sertão.

MPB

80–130 BPM1960s–Present

Música Popular Brasileira — sophisticated art-pop blending samba, bossa, rock, and world music. Caetano Veloso, Gilberto Gil.

Baile Funk

130–150 BPM1990s–Present

Bass-heavy electronic dance music from Rio's favelas. Miami bass influence, call-and-response vocals.

Sertanejo

90–130 BPM1920s–Present

Brazilian country music — acoustic guitar duets evolved into modern pop-sertanejo with electronic production.

How It Compares

Compare Brazil's major music styles — bossa nova, samba, forró, and MPB.

FeatureBossa NovaSambaForróMPB
BPM Range120–140130–170100–14080–130
Key InstrumentsNylon guitar, pianoSurdo, tamborim, cavaquinhoAccordion, zabumba, triangleVaries — guitar, keys, strings
MoodCool, intimate, sophisticatedJoyful, energetic, carnivalFestive, romantic, earthyArtistic, intellectual, varied
HarmonyJazz-influenced, complexDiatonic, modalSimple, folk-basedHighly sophisticated
Dance StyleSubtle swayFull-body movementPartner dance, close holdListening music
Notable ArtistsTom Jobim, João GilbertoBeth Carvalho, Zeca PagodinhoLuiz Gonzaga, DominguinhosCaetano Veloso, Gilberto Gil

Ready-to-Use Prompts

Eight Brazilian music prompts from bossa nova to baile funk — copy one and start creating.

01

Classic Bossa Nova

Create a bossa nova track at 132 BPM in F major. Nylon guitar with João Gilberto-style pattern, soft brushed snare, upright bass, gentle piano chords. Mood: Ipanema sunset.

Bossa NovaClassic
Click to copy
02

Samba de Enredo

Generate a carnival samba at 155 BPM in G major. Full bateria — surdo, tamborim, repinique, caixa, agogô, cuíca. Cavaquinho strumming, brass section. Mood: Carnival parade.

SambaCarnival
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03

Forró Pé de Serra

Produce a traditional forró at 118 BPM in D major. Accordion melody, zabumba groove, triangle pattern, acoustic bass, warm and earthy. Mood: northeastern dance hall.

ForróTraditional
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04

MPB Fusion

Create an MPB piece at 95 BPM in Bb minor. Nylon guitar, subtle electronic textures, strings, sophisticated jazz harmony, Portuguese vocal melody feel. Mood: intellectual and beautiful.

MPBArtistic
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05

Baile Funk Beat

Generate a baile funk track at 140 BPM in A minor. Heavy bass, tamborzão rhythm pattern, MC-style vocal chops, electronic stabs, raw energy. Mood: Rio nightclub.

Baile FunkBass
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06

Samba Jazz

Build a samba-jazz fusion at 145 BPM in C minor. Uptight samba drums, walking jazz bass, piano improvisation, tenor sax solo section, tight ensemble. Mood: 1960s Rio jazz club.

Samba JazzFusion
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07

Bossa Nova Lounge

Create a modern bossa lounge track at 125 BPM in Eb major. Electric piano, soft synth pads, programmed bossa rhythm, mellow bass, smooth and contemporary. Mood: cocktail bar at midnight.

LoungeModern
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08

Axé Carnival

Produce an axé music track at 135 BPM in A major. Electric guitar riff, brass section, timbau drums, high-energy vocals, crowd-sing chorus. Mood: Salvador street carnival.

AxéParty
Click to copy

Where Brazilian Music Lives

Real-world uses for Brazilian music — from film scoring to lounge ambiance and dance.

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Film & Travel Content

Score Brazil-set scenes, travel vlogs, and cultural documentaries with authentic Brazilian sound.

Three Simple Steps

From idea to finished track — describe, refine, and export your brazilian music.

01

Describe Your Vision

Tell Music Agent what kind of track you want — reference a mood, artist, or scene. No jargon needed.

02

Refine Through Chat

Fine-tune BPM, key, instruments, and structure through natural conversation. Iterate until it's perfect.

03

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 brazilian music with Tunee.

Yes. The AI replicates the signature bossa nova guitar rhythm — the syncopated pattern pioneered by João Gilberto. Specify 'bossa nova guitar' for authentic results.

Samba is high-energy, percussion-driven carnival music. Bossa nova is a quieter, jazz-influenced offshoot with intimate guitar, soft vocals, and sophisticated harmony.

Yes. Baile funk, sertanejo, axé, and Brazilian bass music are all supported alongside traditional styles.

Absolutely. Brazilian-jazz, bossa-electronic, samba-funk, and other fusions are natural and well-supported by the AI.

Yes. All Tunee tracks are commercially licensed — use them in films, ads, restaurants, streaming releases, and any commercial project.

Ready to Create Your
Brazilian Music?

From bossa nova to carnival samba — bring the sound of Brazil to life in minutes.

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