Swing
Music Generator
Big band horns punching in unison, a walking bass line driving the groove, brushed drums swinging with irresistible momentum, and the energy that made a generation dance. Describe your scene and let Music Agent swing it into existence.
Savoy Nights
Swing AI
Swing DNA
The four pillars that define swing — origins, structure, sounds, and production.
Origins & Roots
Swing emerged in the early 1930s as jazz big bands developed a danceable, rhythmically propulsive style. Benny Goodman's 1938 Carnegie Hall concert marked the genre's cultural peak. Duke Ellington, Count Basie, and Glenn Miller led orchestras that defined the Swing Era (1935–1946). Swing was America's popular music during World War II, uniting the country through dance halls, radio broadcasts, and V-Disc recordings.
Song Structure
Swing arrangements follow 32-bar AABA song form or 12-bar blues, built for dancing. A typical arrangement: ensemble intro, melody stated by the full band, solo sections over the chord changes (trumpet, sax, trombone), a shout chorus building energy, and a climactic full-band finish. Call-and-response between brass and reed sections creates dynamic conversation. Tempo ranges from 120 BPM (slow swing) to 180+ BPM (up-tempo).
Signature Sounds
The big band brass section — trumpets, trombones — delivers power and precision. The saxophone section (altos, tenors, baritone) provides the warm, reedy middle. Walking bass drives quarter notes through the harmony. Drums swing with ride cymbal, hi-hat on 2 and 4, and brush work. Piano comps with rhythmic chord voicings. Clarinet (Goodman's signature) floats above the ensemble. The swing feel — a triplet-based rhythmic interpretation — is the essential ingredient.
Production Style
Vintage swing was captured with ribbon microphones in large rooms — one or two mics for the entire big band. Modern swing production uses close-miking and careful mixing to balance 15–20 musicians. The brass section needs room to bloom without overpowering. Walking bass should be warm and present. Drums need the brush texture preserved. Reverb suggests a dance hall or ballroom. The swing rhythm must breathe — never quantized to a grid.
Explore the Spectrum
Six distinct eras within swing — from classic big band to electro swing.
Big Band Swing
The classic sound — full big band with brass, reeds, and rhythm section. Count Basie, Duke Ellington, and Glenn Miller defined the era with danceable, orchestral jazz.
Small Group Swing
Combo-sized swing — trio to sextet. Benny Goodman's small groups and Nat King Cole Trio proved you could swing hard with fewer musicians.
Western Swing
Swing meets country — steel guitar, fiddle, and twang over a swinging rhythm section. Bob Wills and the Texas Playboys created this distinctly American hybrid.
Jump Blues
High-energy swing with a blues foundation — Louis Jordan, Cab Calloway, and Big Joe Turner bridged swing and the birth of rock and roll.
Electro Swing
Vintage swing samples over modern electronic beats — Parov Stelar, Caravan Palace, and Jamie Berry bring the 1930s to the 21st-century club.
Neo-Swing
The 1990s swing revival — Big Bad Voodoo Daddy, Brian Setzer Orchestra, and Cherry Poppin' Daddies brought swing back to mainstream pop culture.
How It Compares
See how swing stacks up against bebop, jazz, and blues across key characteristics.
| Feature | Swing | Bebop | Jazz | Blues |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BPM Range | 120–180 | 160–300 | 60–200 | 60–130 |
| Ensemble | Big band (15–20) | Small combo (3–6) | Varies widely | Solo to small band |
| Purpose | Dancing and entertainment | Listening and artistry | Both — depends on style | Emotional expression |
| Rhythm Feel | Swing triplet groove | Complex, fast swing | Varied by subgenre | Shuffle or straight |
| Arrangement | Highly orchestrated | Head + improvisation | Varies widely | Simple, riff-based |
| Notable Artists | Basie, Ellington, Goodman | Parker, Gillespie, Monk | Miles, Coltrane, Herbie | B.B. King, Muddy Waters |
Ready-to-Use Prompts
Eight curated prompts covering every swing era and style — copy one and start creating instantly.
Savoy Ballroom
Create a big band swing track at 145 BPM in Bb major. Full horn section in unison, walking bass, brushed drums, piano comping, and a clarinet solo. Mood: packed ballroom, Lindy Hop dancers flying.
After Hours
Generate a small group swing at 130 BPM in F major. Piano trio — piano, bass, drums — with light brush work, elegant piano voicings, and a relaxed but swinging groove. Mood: late-night cocktail lounge.
Jump and Jive
Produce a jump blues swing at 155 BPM in C major. Honking saxophone, boogie-woogie piano, slap bass, driving drums, and high-energy horn riffs. Mood: crowd on their feet, shouting and dancing.
Western Dance
Create a Western swing track at 140 BPM in G major. Steel guitar, fiddle, acoustic guitar rhythm, walking bass, and a shuffling drum pattern. Mood: Texas dance hall on a Saturday night.
Electro Swing Club
Build an electro swing track at 128 BPM in A minor. Vintage horn sample, electronic bass drop, four-on-the-floor kick, vinyl crackle, and a modern dance beat under the swinging melody. Mood: retro-futuristic speakeasy club.
Ellington Suite
Compose a Duke Ellington-inspired piece at 135 BPM in D minor. Sophisticated horn voicings, plunger-muted trumpet, walking bass, piano fills, and a moody, atmospheric quality. Mood: Harlem Renaissance elegance.
Glenn Miller Mood
Generate a Glenn Miller-style track at 125 BPM in Eb major. Clarinet-led reed section in close harmony, muted brass accents, smooth walking bass, and gentle drum work. Mood: nostalgic wartime romance.
Basie Blues
Produce a Kansas City swing blues at 150 BPM in Bb major. Count Basie-style sparse piano, tenor saxophone riffing, punchy brass hits, driving walking bass, and a hard-swinging drum groove. Mood: all-night jam session energy.
Where Swing Lives
Real-world scenarios where swing music shines — from dance floors to film sets.
Swing Dance Events
Create original swing music for Lindy Hop, West Coast Swing, and Balboa dance events — authentic tempos and grooves for every level.
三個簡單步驟
從創意到成品 — 描述、優化、匯出你的swing音樂。
描述你的想法
告訴 Music Agent 你想要什麼樣的曲目 — 可以參考某種情緒、藝術家或場景,無需專業術語。
透過對話優化
透過自然對話微調 BPM、調性、樂器和曲式結構,反覆調整直到滿意為止。
匯出並使用
下載高品質音訊檔案,完全支援商業用途 — 遊戲、影片、廣告等。
探索更多風格
發現相關風格,拓展你的音樂調色盤。
常見問題
關於使用 Tunee 創作swing音樂,你需要知道的一切。
Yes. All tracks generated through Tunee are cleared for commercial use — events, film, streaming, dance events, and more. No royalty fees or licensing issues.
Yes. The AI understands the triplet-based swing feel that defines the genre — it's not just straight eighth notes. The groove has the proper lilt, accents, and rhythmic interplay.
Absolutely. Request a full big band (15–20 pieces), a small combo (trio to sextet), or even a solo piano swing arrangement. Specify exactly which instruments you want.
Yes. Request vintage swing elements over modern electronic production — the AI can blend classic horn samples and swing rhythms with contemporary beats, bass drops, and electronic effects.
Yes. Specify tempos for different dance styles — slow swing (120 BPM), Lindy Hop (140–170 BPM), or up-tempo (180+ BPM). The AI will match the groove to the dance.
Ready to Create Your
Swing Music?
From classic big band to electro swing — get everyone dancing in minutes.
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