Generate with AI
Describe the music you want — mood, genre, instruments, tempo — and PrePrompt generates a track. Iterate on the description until the feel is right.
The Song Node is where music comes from. Either generate a score with AI — describing mood, genre, and instrumentation — or upload an audio file you already have. Approved music syncs into the Timeline’s Music track, underneath your dialogue.
Generate with AI
Describe the music you want — mood, genre, instruments, tempo — and PrePrompt generates a track. Iterate on the description until the feel is right.
Upload a file
Drop in a music file you own or have licensed. The Song Node handles it the same as a generated track — waveform display, trimming, volume control.
Most creators use both: generate a scratch track to time the scene, then replace with a licensed track for the final export.
The Song Node’s generation input is a prompt describing the music you want. You have three dimensions to specify:
Example prompts:
“Slow, tense orchestral score. Low strings, distant piano, minimal percussion. Feels like the moment before a reveal.”
“Upbeat indie rock with acoustic guitar, tambourine, and driving drums. Warm and nostalgic.”
“Ambient synth drone with occasional bell tones. Weightless and uncertain.”
Write a prompt. Be specific — vague prompts generate generic music.
Set target duration. The Song Node will try to match it, usually within a few seconds.
Click Generate. A track renders with a visible waveform.
Play it back. If the vibe is right, approve it. If not, adjust the prompt and regenerate.
If you already have music — licensed, original, or a placeholder — drag the audio file into the Song Node. It loads with the same waveform display and trimming tools as a generated track.
Every track — generated or uploaded — displays as a waveform: a horizontal graph of audio amplitude over time. You use the waveform for three things:
Two adjustments live on the Song Node itself (before the track reaches the Timeline):
For finer moves (fades, ducking, cross-fades), use the Timeline after the track syncs.
For stereo placement, the Song Node has a pan control — center is default, hard left or right places the track in one speaker. Most scores stay centered; pan is useful for specific effects.
The Song Node connects to the Timeline the same way other nodes do: draw a line from the Song Node’s output to the Timeline’s input. The Timeline’s Music track picks up the approved song automatically.
Approve the song in the Song Node.
Connect to the Timeline.
Open the Timeline editor. The music appears on the Music track, usually at timecode zero.
Drag to retime if the music should start later. Use the Timeline’s clip controls for fades.
One Song Node holds one track. For scenes with multiple pieces of music — an opening theme, a chase cue, a closing track — use multiple Song Nodes, each connected to the same Timeline. They stack on the Music track in the order you place them.
Can I generate music in a specific tempo (BPM)? Include the tempo in your prompt — for example, “80 BPM ambient synth.” The Song Node will aim for it but isn’t frame-accurate to an exact BPM.
Do generated tracks have vocals? Not by default. PrePrompt’s generation is oriented toward score and instrumental music. Vocal generation is a separate flow planned as a future feature.
What audio formats can I upload? Standard music formats: MP3, WAV, AAC, M4A, FLAC, OGG. If you have a file in an unusual format, convert it to MP3 or WAV before uploading.
Can I loop a short music clip to cover a long scene? The Song Node doesn’t auto-loop. Either generate a track at the full scene length, or place multiple copies of the same Song Node’s output on the Timeline to approximate a loop.
Is the generated music cleared for commercial use? Generation rights depend on the underlying AI model’s terms. Check the PrePrompt terms of service for specifics — in general, generated music is yours to use for the project you created it in. For commercial release, verify the current policy.
Can I edit the generated music outside PrePrompt? Yes. Export the Timeline as MP4 and the music is baked in. If you need the music as a standalone stem, download the track from the Song Node’s playback controls.