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Keep the vibe but change the lyrics
Use Reuse Prompt when you want a new lyric version based on the same song recipe.
Reuse Prompt
Danger Zone: Reuse Prompt is not an exact clone button.
- It can create a new version based on the same recipe, but it may change beat, voice, melody, or performance.
- Ask for cadence, structure, groove, and hook timing instead of promising exact preservation.
Safer move: Use it when you need a new version, not a tiny repair.
When to use it
- You want new lyrics over a similar groove or structure.
- The topic changes but the vibe should stay close.
- A whole verse, chorus, or full lyric set needs replacement.
When not to use it
- Only one word or line is wrong.
- You only want a cleaner/louder mix.
- You require the exact same beat, voice, melody, and performance.
Step-by-step
- Decide which parts must feel familiar: beat, tempo, groove, cadence, hook timing, or structure.
- Use Reuse Prompt to create a new version based on that recipe.
- Add the new lyric direction or full new lyrics.
- Use careful language like “as close as possible” and “preserve cadence where possible.”
- Compare several generations if exact feel matters.
Copy-paste prompt
“Keep the same beat, tempo, groove, drum pattern, bass movement, vocal energy, song structure, and hook timing. Use new lyrics while preserving the original cadence as much as possible.”
Example
If you love the bounce and hook timing but need lyrics about a different story, ask for the same groove and structure with new lyrics that preserve cadence as much as possible.
Common mistakes
- Calling it a guaranteed same-beat version.
- Using Replace Section for a full-song rewrite.
- Forgetting to describe the groove, structure, and hook timing.