Copy-paste ammo
Prompt Snippets
Reusable prompts for repairs, translations, cleaner versions, endings, and remixes.
Small repairs
Pronunciation fix
Best when the rest of the song is already working.
“Replace only the selected line. Keep the same melody, timing, voice, emotion, beat, and surrounding arrangement. Correct the pronunciation only.”
Danger Zone: Do not nuke the whole song for one bad word.
- Regenerating or heavily reworking a good track can change the parts you already liked.
- Keep the repair as small and local as Suno allows.
Safer move: Try Replace Section / Edit Lyrics first.
Phonetic spelling
Replace the brackets with the real word and a simple phonetic version.
“Pronounce ‘[WORD]’ as ‘[PHONETIC VERSION].’ Keep the same cadence and syllable timing.”
Lyrics and structure
Same beat, new lyrics
This asks for the closest option, not a guaranteed exact beat.
“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.”
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.
Translate song
Natural phrasing matters more than dictionary-perfect lines.
“Keep the same beat, tempo, groove, arrangement, section structure, vocal energy, and hook timing. Translate the song naturally into [LANGUAGE]. Prioritize singable phrasing over literal translation.”
Danger Zone: Literal translations often do not sing naturally.
- A word-for-word translation can wreck cadence, rhyme, and hook feel.
- Ask for natural, singable phrasing in the target language.
Safer move: Prioritize singable phrasing over literal accuracy.
Sound quality
Cleaner version
Use when the song is right but the mix feels rough.
“Create a cleaner, more polished version. Keep the same performance, vocal identity, timing, melody, arrangement, and emotional feel. Improve clarity, balance, and overall mix without changing the song.”
Danger Zone: Remaster is for sound, not words.
- Do not use Remaster for lyric rewrites, translations, or story changes.
- It is best when the song is right but the mix needs polish.
Safer move: Use Replace Section or Reuse Prompt for lyric changes.
Extend and endings
New ending
Pick the extension point carefully.
“Continue from this point with the same tempo, key, groove, vocal tone, and emotional energy. Create a stronger ending that feels natural and complete.”
Danger Zone: Extend can change everything after the selected point.
- The earlier part should stay intact, but the generated continuation may drift.
- Choose the start point carefully and describe the landing you want.
Safer move: Start close to the part you want to replace or continue.
Remix and style
Club remix
This is a reimagining, not a polish pass.
“Reimagine this as a danceable club remix with a stronger kick, deeper bass, wider synths, more movement, and a bigger chorus. Keep the core melody and emotional identity recognizable.”
Danger Zone: Style changes are reimaginings.
- Cover or major genre changes can alter arrangement, groove, voice, and melody.
- Use careful expectations: recognizable, not identical.
Safer move: Name the parts that matter most: lyric, hook, energy, or mood.