Piano Solo Musics Created with Suno
These tracks were created using the AI music generator Suno. I’ve subscribed to their service, which allows for unrestricted use of the music. I also don’t claim any exclusive rights to these tracks, so feel free to use them however you like.
The newly created music tracks this time are piano solos. Inspired by Japanese new-age musicians like Yukie Kuramoto, I made several generation requests, tweaking the prompts slightly until the desired style was achieved. Once satisfied, I generated the entire set of tracks using the same prompt. The exact prompt used was: “Slow calm morning piano solo. forest. meditation. newage. Sipping coffee with a peaceful mind in the morning. petrichor.”
Since I aimed to fill a 2-hour video with similar vibes, I applied this prompt to all the tracks.
As the songs generated this time were longer, only 33 tracks were needed to fill the 2-hour duration.
One thing I discovered is that when the music is generated as a 4-minute track, it abruptly stops at the 4-minute mark. This is a drawback I noted when using Meta MusicGen, and it appears that Suno, which can generate tracks up to 4 minutes, has a similar issue. Most tracks usually end before reaching 4 minutes, so I hadn’t noticed this before. However, the prompt used this time resulted in many tracks longer than 4 minutes, and these tracks abruptly stop once they exceed 4 minutes. You can hear what I mean by listening to the end of tracks 2, 3, 5, and 6, which exceed 4 minutes.
While creating the video, I handled this by applying a fade-out effect to the music. However, to improve quality, I think it’s better to discard these tracks altogether. Any track generated longer than 4 minutes should be considered a mistake and discarded. Alternatively, if the music up to 4 minutes is satisfactory, there’s an option to pay additional credits to extend the length.
Another drawback I noticed previously is that while Suno automatically generates track titles, using the same prompt for mass generation leads to multiple tracks with identical titles, complicating file management. Since the goal was to create several similar tracks rather than one unique piece, the individual track titles weren’t particularly important. This time, I simply numbered the titles consecutively, like 01, 02, 03, etc.
Occasionally, a track would unexpectedly become noisy. I encountered this before, where a supposedly calm track had a sudden noisy section. This issue appeared in the newly generated tracks as well. For instance, track 31 has a noisy part starting around 3 minutes and 55 seconds.
Lastly, it seems that the client’s PC specs may influence the outcome. This time, I used a different PC from last time, and whereas previously, 3 out of 10 tracks would fail to generate, this time, none did. The PC I used before didn’t display anything in Suno’s Library menu, whereas the new PC showed all my generated tracks in the menu. Previously, I didn’t know where to find my generated tracks, but it seems it was just an issue with that particular PC. The tracks that failed before would stop generating after about 5 seconds, but this time, most tracks reached the full 4 minutes. It could be due to the different PC, or it might just be a coincidence. Continued use will likely clarify this.
Here is the newly created video using these music tracks.
