Symphony
Music Generator

The symphony is Western music's grandest architecture — a multi-movement journey through contrasting emotions, tempos, and keys. Describe a vision, a narrative arc, or a feeling — and let Music Agent compose an original symphonic work that unfolds with dramatic purpose.

100+ Prompts8K+ Tracks CreatedCommercial Ready
Tunee Music Agent
Create a symphonic first movement, 132 BPM, sonata form in C minor, dramatic opening with full orchestra building to a development section
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Here's your symphonic first movement — a bold opening statement in C minor with driving strings and brass, transitioning through a lyrical second theme before an intense, modulatory development section.

Symphony of the Storm

Symphony AI

132 BPMC MinorSonata Form
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Symphony DNA

The four building blocks that define the symphonic form — legacy, structure, orchestra, and development.

01

Origins & Legacy

Joseph Haydn, the 'Father of the Symphony,' established the four-movement form in the mid-18th century with over 100 symphonies. Beethoven expanded its emotional and structural scope — his Ninth Symphony (1824) broke every convention by adding voices and choir, transforming the symphony from entertainment into artistic manifesto.

02

Four-Movement Form

The classical four-movement structure: I. Allegro in sonata form (exposition, development, recapitulation), II. Adagio or Andante slow movement (lyrical, introspective), III. Minuet or Scherzo (dance-like, rhythmic energy), IV. Finale — often Allegro or Presto (triumphant resolution or dramatic conclusion).

03

The Symphony Orchestra

A full symphony orchestra of 60–100+ musicians organized into strings (first violins, second violins, violas, cellos, double basses), woodwinds (flutes, oboes, clarinets, bassoons in pairs), brass (horns, trumpets, trombones, tuba), and percussion (timpani, snare, bass drum, cymbals, triangle, and specialty instruments).

04

Thematic Development

The symphony's intellectual core: themes introduced in the exposition are fragmented, transposed, inverted, augmented, and recombined during development sections. Motivic development — building entire movements from small melodic cells (as Beethoven's Fifth demonstrates with four notes) — and tonal architecture create large-scale musical narrative.

Explore the Spectrum

Six distinct symphonic traditions — each with its own scale, ambition, and artistic purpose.

Classical Symphony

80–160 BPM1750–1820

The foundational form perfected by Haydn and Mozart. Elegant proportions, clear tonal plans, balanced phrases, and a conversational interplay between orchestral sections. Typically four movements lasting 20–35 minutes.

Romantic Symphony

50–170 BPM1800–1910

Expanded in every dimension — larger orchestras, longer durations (Mahler's Third runs 100 minutes), richer harmonies, and intensely personal expression. Beethoven, Brahms, Tchaikovsky, and Mahler pushed the form to its emotional extremes.

Modern Symphony

40–180 BPM1910–Present

Post-Romantic and 20th-century symphonies from Shostakovich, Prokofiev, and Sibelius challenge tonal conventions with dissonance, neoclassical structures, and political subtext. The symphony becomes a vehicle for social commentary.

Programmatic Symphony

50–160 BPM1830–Present

Symphonies that tell a story or depict scenes — Berlioz's Symphonie fantastique (1830) pioneered the concept with its idée fixe. Strauss's tone poems and Dukas's The Sorcerer's Apprentice extend the narrative tradition.

Choral Symphony

50–160 BPM1824–Present

Symphonies incorporating vocal soloists and choir, beginning with Beethoven's Ninth. Mahler's Second ('Resurrection') and Eighth ('Symphony of a Thousand') make the human voice an integral part of the orchestral canvas.

Sinfonietta

80–160 BPM1900s–Present

A shorter, lighter symphony for reduced orchestra. Janáček's Sinfonietta (1926) is the most famous example — festive brass fanfares and folk-inspired energy in a compact, five-movement form.

How It Compares

See how the symphony stacks up against the concerto, suite, and tone poem across key structural characteristics.

FeatureSymphonyConcertoSuiteTone Poem
Movements3–4 movements3 movements (fast-slow-fast)4–8 dance movementsSingle movement
Duration20–100+ minutes20–45 minutes15–40 minutes10–30 minutes
SoloistNo featured soloistSolo instrument + orchestraNo soloist (ensemble)No soloist (orchestra)
StructureSonata form, scherzo, finaleSolo-tutti dialogueSequence of dances/piecesFree narrative form
PurposeAbstract musical argumentVirtuosity and dialogueEntertainment, varietyStorytelling, depiction
Notable WorksBeethoven 5, Mahler 2Tchaikovsky Piano 1, Elgar CelloBach Orchestral SuitesStrauss Also sprach, Smetana Moldau

Ready-to-Use Prompts

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

01

Classical First Movement

Create a Classical-style symphony first movement at 132 BPM in G major. Sonata form with a bright, singing first theme in the strings, a contrasting lyrical second theme in the dominant (D major) introduced by woodwinds, and a contrapuntal development section. Mood: energetic and elegant.

ClassicalSonata Form
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02

Romantic Slow Movement

Compose a Romantic-era symphonic slow movement at 54 BPM in Ab major. Singing cello melody over sustained string harmonies, with a rich French horn countermelody. A passionate middle section in the minor mode builds to a climactic fortissimo before returning to the tender opening. Mood: deeply emotional and lyrical.

RomanticAdagio
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03

Scherzo and Trio

Generate a symphonic scherzo at 160 BPM in D minor. Playful, rhythmically driving strings in 3/4 time with sforzando accents. The contrasting trio section shifts to D major with a warm woodwind melody over pizzicato strings. Da capo return to the scherzo. Mood: witty and energetic.

ScherzoRhythmic
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04

Triumphant Finale

Produce a symphonic finale at 144 BPM in C major. Rondo form (ABACABA) with a jubilant main theme stated by full brass. Episodes feature solo woodwind passages and a fugato development. Coda accelerates to a blazing Presto with timpani rolls and cymbal crashes. Mood: victorious and celebratory.

FinaleTriumphant
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05

Programmatic Storm

Build a programmatic symphonic movement at 120 BPM depicting a thunderstorm. Start with calm strings in F major (pastoral calm), introduce rumbling timpani and tremolo lower strings as clouds gather, build to a fortissimo storm with brass lightning and crashing percussion, then gradually resolve to peaceful sunshine. Mood: dramatic nature painting.

ProgrammaticDramatic
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06

Choral Symphony Climax

Create a choral symphony movement at 100 BPM in D major. Full orchestra introduces a hymn-like theme, then SATB choir enters with sustained chords growing in intensity. Soprano soloist sings above the texture. Build to a monumental tutti with choir and orchestra in unison octaves. Mood: transcendent and awe-inspiring.

ChoralEpic
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07

Modern Symphonic Tension

Generate a modern symphonic movement at 90 BPM in B-flat minor. Angular melodic fragments passed between sections, dissonant brass clusters, ostinato snare drum pattern, and polytonal string layers. A solo trumpet melody cuts through the tension. Mood: anxious, searching, and restless.

ModernIntense
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08

Sinfonietta Fanfare

Compose a sinfonietta opening at 112 BPM in E-flat major. Festive brass fanfare with 4 French horns and 3 trumpets, answered by energetic string runs and woodwind flourishes. Percussion accents (timpani, triangle, snare) punctuate the phrases. Compact ABA form. Mood: celebratory and brilliant.

SinfoniettaFanfare
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Where Symphonic Music Lives

Real-world scenarios where symphonic music shines — from concert halls to interactive media.

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Film & TV Scoring

Symphonic music drives the emotional core of blockbuster films, prestige TV, and period dramas. Create custom symphonic cues for any narrative moment.

Три Простых Шага

От идеи до готового трека — опишите, доработайте и экспортируйте вашу музыку symphony.

01

Опишите Ваше Видение

Расскажите Music Agent, какой трек вы хотите — укажите настроение, артиста или сцену. Никакого жаргона.

02

Доработайте в Чате

Настройте BPM, тональность, инструменты и структуру через естественную беседу. Повторяйте до совершенства.

03

Экспортируйте и Используйте

Скачайте трек в высоком качестве. Полностью свободен от роялти — игры, видео, реклама и многое другое.

Исследуйте Другие Жанры

Откройте связанные жанры и расширьте свою звуковую палитру.

Часто Задаваемые Вопросы

Всё, что нужно знать о создании музыки symphony с Tunee.

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

Not at all. Describe what you want in plain language — "dramatic orchestral piece with a big climax" or "calm, flowing strings like a slow movement" works perfectly. The AI handles form, orchestration, and development.

All major traditions including Classical Symphony, Romantic Symphony, Modern Symphony, Programmatic Symphony, Choral Symphony, and Sinfonietta. You can also blend eras for a unique compositional voice.

Absolutely. Request sonata-allegro first movements, lyrical adagios, scherzo-and-trio third movements, or rondo finales. Specify tempo markings, keys, and thematic character for each movement.

Tunee can generate individual movements or complete multi-section works. For full symphonies, generate each movement separately with connected thematic material for a cohesive multi-movement experience.

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Symphony?

From elegant Classical movements to epic Romantic climaxes — bring your symphonic vision to life in minutes.

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