African
Music Generator
Tap into the polyrhythmic heartbeat of an entire continent — from West African djembe circles to Congolese guitar lines and modern Afrobeats. Describe a rhythm or region and let Music Agent craft your track.
Lagos Sunrise
African AI
African Music DNA
The four building blocks that define the African sound — origins, structure, instruments, and rhythm.
Origins
Diverse traditions spanning 54 nations and thousands of ethnic groups. Call-and-response singing, polyrhythmic complexity, and communal music-making form the shared foundation. Music is inseparable from dance, ceremony, storytelling, and daily life across the continent.
Structure
Built on cyclical patterns rather than linear verse-chorus forms. Interlocking rhythms where each part is simple but the composite is complex. Community-based — performances are participatory, with audience call-and-response driving the energy.
Instruments
Djembe, talking drum (dundun), kora (21-string harp), balafon (wooden xylophone), mbira/kalimba (thumb piano), shekere (gourd shaker), and a vast array of regional drums, flutes, and string instruments. Modern additions include guitar, bass, keyboards, and horns.
Rhythm
Polyrhythmic layers are the defining feature — multiple independent rhythms interlock to form a cohesive groove. Cross-rhythms, hemiola, 12/8 time feel, and bell patterns (like the standard pattern) organize the rhythmic texture. The timeline pattern played on a bell is often the structural backbone.
Explore the Spectrum
Six distinct subgenres within African music — each with its own rhythm, region, and cultural roots.
Afrobeats
Nigeria and Ghana's modern global export blending West African rhythms with hip-hop, dancehall, and electronic production. Driven by artists like Burna Boy, Wizkid, and Davido into worldwide mainstream success.
Highlife
Ghana's golden genre fusing local rhythms with Western jazz and brass-band instrumentation. E.T. Mensah and Osibisa pioneered the sound that influenced Afrobeats, jùjú, and Afropop.
Soukous
Congolese rumba evolution featuring intricate electric guitar fingerpicking, horn sections, and irresistible dance grooves. Franco, Tabu Ley Rochereau, and Koffi Olomidé are towering figures.
Afropop
Broad category of modern African popular music blending traditional elements with pop, R&B, and electronic production. Accessible melodies and polished production for a global audience.
Mbalax
Senegal's national rhythm driven by the sabar drum and griot vocal traditions. Youssou N'Dour brought mbalax to world stages, fusing Wolof percussion with pop and jazz elements.
Jùjú
Yoruba popular music from Nigeria layering talking drums over guitar-driven grooves with call-and-response vocals. King Sunny Adé defined the genre with his steel guitar and complex percussion.
How It Compares
See how African music stacks up against Caribbean, Latin, and Afrobeats across key musical characteristics.
| Feature | African | Caribbean | Latin | Afrobeats |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BPM Range | 90–160 | 80–140 | 80–220 | 100–120 |
| Key Instruments | Djembe, kora, talking drum, balafon | Steel pan, bass, drums, horns | Congas, piano, brass, guitar | Synths, guitar, percussion, 808 |
| Rhythm Feel | Polyrhythmic, 12/8, bell patterns | Calypso, reggae, soca grooves | Clave-based, syncopated | Laid-back groove, interlocking parts |
| Harmony | Pentatonic, call-and-response | Major key, I–IV–V–I | I–IV–V, modal mixture | Simple loops, minor tonality |
| Typical Use | Dance, ceremony, celebration, film | Carnival, festivals, parties | Dance, parties, film, fitness | Clubs, radio, streaming, social media |
| Notable Artists | Fela Kuti, Youssou N'Dour | Bob Marley, Mighty Sparrow | Celia Cruz, Buena Vista | Burna Boy, Wizkid, Davido |
Ready-to-Use Prompts
Eight curated prompts covering every African music mood — copy one and start creating instantly.
Afrobeats Groove
Create an Afrobeats track at 108 BPM in G minor. Interlocking guitar patterns over a laid-back drum groove with shaker and hi-hat, deep sub-bass, horn stabs on the chorus, and a catchy vocal-style melodic hook. Mood: Lagos nightlife energy.
Highlife Golden Hour
Generate a highlife track at 115 BPM in C major. Bright trumpet melody over a palm wine guitar rhythm, walking bass line, conga and shaker percussion, and joyful call-and-response vocal arrangement. Mood: golden age Accra dance hall.
Soukous Guitar Fire
Compose a soukous track at 140 BPM in D major. Intricate electric guitar fingerpicking lead (sébène style), rhythmic second guitar, driving snare and hi-hat, bass guitar locked in the groove, and brass section punctuation. Mood: Kinshasa concert in full swing.
Djembe Circle
Build a traditional West African percussion ensemble piece at 120 BPM. Djembe playing the lead rhythm with solo breaks, dundun bass drums providing the timeline, shekere shaking a steady pattern, and balafon adding melodic phrases. Call-and-response vocal chants. Mood: village celebration under open sky.
Kora Meditation
Produce a solo kora piece at 85 BPM in D major (pentatonic). Gentle 21-string arpeggios with the signature kora shimmer, subtle ostinato bass pattern, and a contemplative melody that builds slowly. Add soft ambient textures beneath. Mood: Sahel sunset, griot storytelling.
Mbalax Rhythm Explosion
Create a mbalax track at 130 BPM in A minor. Driving sabar drum patterns with rapid-fire rolls, electric guitar riff locking with the percussion, bass guitar groove, and a soaring vocal melody with Wolof-inspired phrasing. Mood: Dakar dance floor at peak energy.
Afropop Sunshine
Generate a modern Afropop track at 105 BPM in Eb major. Clean electric guitar arpeggios, polished synth pads, tight drum programming with African percussion layers, catchy melodic hook, and warm bass. Mood: feel-good summer anthem for streaming.
Mbira Night Song
Compose a mbira (thumb piano) piece at 90 BPM in G major (pentatonic). Interlocking mbira patterns creating a shimmering polyrhythmic texture, hosho (gourd shaker) keeping time, and soft vocal harmonies. Build through repetition and subtle variation. Mood: Shona ceremony under starlight.
Where African Music Lives
Real-world scenarios where African music shines — from dance floors to documentary films.
Dance & Fitness
Afrobeats, soukous, and highlife tracks drive Afro-dance classes, fitness sessions, and choreography with infectious, body-moving rhythms.
Três Passos Simples
Da ideia à faixa finalizada — descreva, refine e exporte sua música african.
Descreva Sua Visão
Diga ao Music Agent que tipo de faixa você quer — referencie um humor, artista ou cena. Sem jargão técnico.
Refine por Chat
Ajuste BPM, tom, instrumentos e estrutura através de conversa natural. Itere até ficar perfeito.
Exporte e Use
Baixe sua faixa em áudio de alta qualidade. Totalmente liberada para uso comercial — jogos, vídeos, anúncios e mais.
Explore Mais Gêneros
Descubra gêneros relacionados e expanda sua paleta sonora.
Perguntas Frequentes
Tudo que você precisa saber sobre criar música african com Tunee.
Yes. All tracks generated through Tunee are cleared for commercial use — films, YouTube, ads, events, streaming, and more. No royalty fees or licensing headaches.
Not at all. Describe what you want in plain language — "upbeat African drums" or "smooth Afrobeats groove" works perfectly. The AI understands rhythmic complexity, instrumentation, and regional styles without technical knowledge.
All major styles including Afrobeats, Highlife, Soukous, Afropop, Mbalax, Jùjú, and traditional percussion ensembles. You can also specify regional styles from East, Southern, or North Africa.
Absolutely. Specify any African instrument — kora, djembe, talking drum, balafon, mbira, kalimba, shekere, or sabar. You can also request specific rhythmic patterns and regional styles.
Reference specific countries, cities, or artists — "Lagos Afrobeats," "Kinshasa soukous," or "Fela Kuti-style Afrobeat" gives the AI strong creative direction. Mentioning specific instruments and rhythm patterns also helps dial in authenticity.
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African Music?
From Afrobeats grooves to traditional kora — bring the rhythm of a continent to life in minutes.
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