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Muscle Shoals Singer-Songwriter Bay Simpson Drops Nostalgic Rock Single “Too Good To Be True”

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Bay Simpson arrives as a solo artist with real credentials behind him. The Muscle Shoals singer-songwriter, fresh off a chair turn from Adam Levine on NBC’s The Voice Season 29, has released “Too Good to Be True,” a nostalgic rock single that draws directly from the experience of growing up in the early 2010s and only understanding those years once they’re gone. It’s out now.

The song carries serious songwriting weight. Simpson co-wrote it with Brian Maher, whose credits include Justin Moore chart-toppers, and James LeBlanc, whose pen has touched Kenny Chesney, Rascal Flatts, and Martina McBride. The result is a track built for people who didn’t appreciate what they had until the chapter closed. “I didn’t enjoy high school when I was in it,” Simpson says, “but when I look back now, I miss it.”

Levine’s reaction during the blind audition said plenty. “It’s in your bones,” he told Simpson. “The tone and the way you delivered the vocals really showed me an understanding of rock ‘n’ roll music. This dude is going to be different than anybody on the show.” That kind of endorsement from a rock credibility benchmark doesn’t come easily.

Simpson’s backstory adds another layer. At 20, he landed his first major cut when Kid Rock recorded his song “Never Enough.” He’s shared stages with Dwight Yoakam and Jamey Johnson fronting his country-rock band Outlaw Apostles. Now stepping out solo, he’s bringing the full weight of Muscle Shoals with him.

What Every Venue Manager Should Understand About Switchgear and Electrical Safety

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By Mitch Rice

Running a venue is hard work.

Between planning events, managing employees, and appeasing guests, electrical safety compliance is likely the furthest thing from your mind. But it should be one of the first. One electrical malfunction can close your venue, harm your guests, and cost you everything.

The good news?

Armed with a rudimentary knowledge of switchgear and compliance with electrical safety, you can prevent the majority of switchgear problems that venue managers encounter every year.

Here’s what we’ll cover:

  1. Why Electrical Safety Compliance Matters So Much
  2. What Switchgear Actually Does In Your Venue
  3. The Most Common Switchgear Mistakes Venue Managers Make
  4. 5x Practical Electrical Safety Tips

Why Electrical Safety Compliance Matters So Much

Let’s start with some hard numbers.

Exposure to electricity is among the most common workplace causes of death in the United States. From 2011 through 2022, there were 1,322 deaths at work from electricity exposure. Worryingly, 70% of these fatalities were in non-electrical occupations.

That means the people getting hurt aren’t electricians.

They’re venue employees. Event technicians. Folks just like you. That’s why working with a trusted medium-voltage switchgear manufacturer is a game changer for venue managers serious about electrical safety compliance. You get properly tested equipment that meets modern safety standards — which can save lives.

Here’s why this matters for venues specifically:

  • Masses of people — at any time, there are hundreds (or even thousands) of people within your venue.
  • High power demand — stages, lighting, sound systems, HVAC… that all takes a lot of juice.
  • Complex infrastructure — venues have more electrical systems than a regular office.

If something breaks down, it affects everyone. The stakes are higher for a venue than most commercial spaces.

What Switchgear Actually Does In Your Venue

Switchgear is the backbone of your electrical safety system.

Consider it as a traffic cop for electricity in your venue. It can control, protect and isolate electrical equipment to ensure the safe flow of power to the right place at the right time.

Without proper switchgear, you have no way to:

  • Safely disconnect circuits during maintenance
  • Protect equipment from power surges and short circuits
  • Isolate faults before they cause bigger problems
  • Meet electrical safety compliance standards

Pretty important, right?

Most facilities have low-voltage switchgear (lighting/outlets) and medium-voltage switchgear (larger loads like HVAC, stage, and main power distribution). Medium voltage is what ensures safe and reliable delivery of your facility’s main power. If it fails, everything shuts down.

The Most Common Switchgear Mistakes Venue Managers Make

Here is where things get interesting.

Venue operators don’t intentionally create electrical issues. They simply aren’t trained to recognize them. These are common errors.

Skipping Regular Inspections

The biggest mistake?

Failure to regularly inspect switchgear. Facility managers think, “If the lights are on, switchgear is okay.” Switchgear failures are gradual over months or years. An annoyance now can lead to a catastrophic failure next month.

Visually inspect your switchgear at least annually. Every 6 months if it’s a high use area at a busy venue.

Ignoring Age and Wear

Switchgear doesn’t last forever.

The typical lifespan of most equipment is 25-30 years. However, if you are operating a busy venue, this number decreases. One recent report showed a 29% increase in Lockout/Tagout violations from 2022 to 2023, demonstrating how many businesses are skimping on electrical maintenance.

Be not one of them. If your switchgear is 20 years old or older, begin planning now for a replacement.

Using Unqualified Technicians

This one is a big problem.

It’s easy to understand why some venue owners and facility managers want to hire the cheapest electrician available. However, working on medium-voltage switchgear is a specialised trade. Cutting corners can put lives at risk.

Always make sure your electrician is licensed and has commercial switchgear experience.

5x Practical Electrical Safety Tips

Okay the meat and potatoes. Do these and you should hit most of the frequently encountered problems.

Create A Comprehensive Safety Plan

Every venue needs a written electrical safety plan.

This is not a mere checklist. It’s your guide for when an electrical emergency occurs. Here’s what your safety plan should include:

  • Emergency shutdown procedures for each system
  • Contact info for your electrical contractor
  • Inspection schedules and maintenance records
  • Staff training requirements
  • Documentation of all switchgear and equipment

Make it simple enough for any member of your staff to understand. The best safety plan is one that will be followed.

Train Your Staff Properly

Your staff is your first line of defence.

5,180 non-fatal electrical injuries with days away from work occurred in 2023 and 2024 combined. This is an increase of 59% over the two years prior. Yikes. Training makes a difference.

Make sure your staff knows:

  • How to spot signs of electrical problems (burning smells, flickering lights, hot outlets)
  • What to do in an electrical emergency
  • Who to contact if they notice any issues

Even basic training can prevent most workplace electrical incidents.

Invest In Quality Equipment

Cheap switchgear is expensive.

That sounds counterintuitive, right? But buying the lowest priced equipment means higher costs over time due to equipment failure, downtime, and safety incidents. Quality switchgear has a longer service life, more reliable operation, is up-to-date with today’s safety requirements, and pays for itself over time.

The upfront cost is higher, but it pays for itself within a few years.

Schedule Regular Thermal Imaging

Here’s a pro tip most venue managers miss.

Thermal imaging helps your electrician to identify hot spots in your switchgear before they turn into issues. Hot spots are often a sign of loose connections, worn contacts, or overloaded circuits — all potential fire hazards or sources of equipment failure.

Schedule thermal imaging at least annually. It’s inexpensive, fast, and finds problems before they turn into catastrophes.

Keep Detailed Records

Last but not least — document everything.

All inspections, repairs, and upgrades must be documented. Good records allow you to identify trends, demonstrate compliance at inspection, plan future maintenance, and mitigate liability if something does go wrong.

A simple spreadsheet works fine. The important thing is that you actually do it.

Final Thoughts

Electrical safety compliance isn’t just a box to tick.

It’s the basis of a safe venue. When you know your switchgear, adhere to recommended inspection schedules and commit to quality products, you are keeping your guests, your staff and your business safe. Cutting corners and hoping for the best never pays off.

Remember to:

  • Inspect your switchgear regularly
  • Train your staff properly
  • Work with qualified electrical contractors
  • Invest in quality equipment from trusted manufacturers
  • Keep detailed records of everything

Start with one or two. Build from there. The best time to take care of electrical safety was yesterday. The second best time is today.

Data and information are provided for informational purposes only, and are not intended for investment or other purposes.

Conductor Michael Tilson Thomas, Who Led San Francisco Symphony for 25 Years, Dies at 81

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Michael Tilson Thomas, one of the most galvanizing figures in American classical music, died Wednesday at his home in San Francisco. He was 81. The San Francisco Symphony confirmed that Thomas, known universally as MTT, passed away surrounded by family and friends, succumbing to glioblastoma, an aggressive form of brain cancer he’d been fighting since 2021. His final public appearance was a concert celebrating his 80th birthday in April 2025.

The scope of his career was staggering. A protege of Leonard Bernstein, Thomas served as music director of the San Francisco Symphony for 25 years beginning in 1995, transforming the orchestra into one of the most innovative ensembles in the world. Before San Francisco, he held principal positions with the London Symphony Orchestra, the Los Angeles Philharmonic, and the Buffalo Philharmonic, and conducted virtually every major orchestra on the planet. His 12 Grammy Awards documented a discography of more than 120 recordings, with his Mahler cycle for SFS Media standing as a particular landmark.

Thomas was also a builder. In 1987, he co-founded the New World Symphony in Miami Beach, a postgraduate orchestral academy that trained more than 1,200 fellows over 35 years and transformed South Florida’s cultural landscape. The academy’s Frank Gehry-designed New World Center, which opened in 2011, was Thomas’s vision made permanent. As an educator he had no peer in classical music since Bernstein himself, with his “Keeping Score” television series reaching audiences far beyond the concert hall.

“A ‘coda’ is a musical element at the end of a composition that brings the whole piece to a conclusion,” Thomas said last year when he announced his public appearances would wind down. “My life’s coda is generous and rich.” He is survived by no immediate family. His husband and manager Joshua Robison died in February 2026.

The Afghan Whigs Drop New Single “Duvateen” as 40th Anniversary North American Tour Kicks Off

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Forty years in and The Afghan Whigs are still writing songs that hit like a gut punch. The Cincinnati rock veterans have released “Duvateen” via Royal Cream/BMG, a piano-driven track that finds Greg Dulli staring down mortality with the kind of unflinching clarity that’s defined the band since 1986. The title references the light-manipulating fabric used on film sets, deployed here as a metaphor for the darkness that frames every life.

Dulli doesn’t pull punches about what the song means to him. “When I finished ‘Duvateen,’ it felt like my life passing before my eyes,” he says. “I’m at a precipice in life where I can look behind and clearly see the forest of my youth, but I can also see the path to the other side. And it’s going to inform what I do for the rest of my days.” It’s the kind of songwriting that reminds you why the Whigs have never sounded like anyone else.

“Duvateen” follows “House of I,” their first new music since 2022, which drew praise from Rolling Stone, SPIN, and Pitchfork. Both singles point toward a new album arriving later this year. Details are coming soon.

The 40th Anniversary North American Tour launches this weekend with Mercury Rev along for the ride as special guests. Twenty-one dates stretch from Woodstock, NY to Pioneertown, CA, covering the coasts and everything in between. UK dates follow in September.

“40 years later, I still get to do the thing I love the most,” Dulli says. “Writing songs and performing them with my friends all over the world. I truly have to pinch myself.”

Tickets and info at linktr.ee/theafghanwhigs.

The Afghan Whigs & Mercury Rev Tour Dates:

April 25, Bearsville Theater, Woodstock, NY

April 27, Royale, Boston, MA

April 28, 9:30 Club, Washington D.C.

April 30, Webster Hall, New York, NY

May 1, Union Transfer, Philadelphia, PA

May 2, Mr. Smalls Theater, Pittsburgh, PA

May 4, Town Ballroom, Buffalo, NY

May 5, House of Blues, Cleveland, OH

May 6, Bogart’s, Cincinnati, OH

May 8, Turner Hall Ballroom, Milwaukee, WI

May 9, Metro, Chicago, IL

May 10, Varsity Theater, Minneapolis, MN

May 12, Summit Music Hall, Denver, CO

May 15, Aladdin Theatre, Portland, OR

May 16, Commodore Ballroom, Vancouver, BC

May 17, The Showbox, Seattle, WA

May 19, The Fillmore, San Francisco, CA

May 20, The Bellwether, Los Angeles, CA

May 22, The Observatory, Santa Ana, CA

May 23, The Observatory North Park, San Diego, CA

May 24, Pappy & Harriet’s, Pioneertown, CA

UK Dates:

September 19, Stylus, Leeds, UK

September 20, The Palais, Nottingham, UK

September 22, SWG3 Galvanizers, Glasgow, UK

September 23, O2 Ritz, Manchester, UK

September 24, O2 Shepherd’s Bush Empire, London, UK

September 26, Chalk, Brighton, UK

Countertenor John Holiday Announces Debut Album ‘Over My Head’ Arriving This July

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John Holiday has one of the most distinctive voices in classical music, and now it’s getting its proper debut. The acclaimed countertenor releases his first album, ‘Over My Head,’ on July 17, 2026 through PENTATONE. Recorded at WGBH studios in Boston alongside pianist and close collaborator Kevin Miller, the album weaves together spirituals, art song, and contemporary works into a deeply personal program Holiday describes as “Love in the Key of Resilience.”

The repertoire covers serious ground. Works by Hall Johnson, Robert L. Morris, and H. Leslie Adams sit alongside world premiere recordings by Theo Morrison and Carlos Simon, plus Holiday’s own arrangements of standards including “Fly Me to the Moon,” “Summertime,” and “Strange Fruit.” It’s a program that reflects the full range of an artist equally at home in Baroque opera and American song.

The Wall Street Journal calls his voice “arrestingly powerful, secure and dramatically high.” The Los Angeles Times names him “one of the finest countertenors of his generation.” The New Yorker simply called it “a thing of astonishing beauty.” The critical consensus is unanimous, and ‘Over My Head’ is the record that formally introduces Holiday to a wider audience.

PENTATONE rolls out the album digitally ahead of the July release, with Holiday’s arrangement of “Strange Fruit” arriving May 22, followed by Theo Morrison’s “I Hear an Army Charging Upon the Land” on June 26.

‘Over My Head’ arrives July 17, 2026 on PENTATONE.

‘Over My Head’ Tracklist:

  1. I’m Gonter Tell God All O’ My Troubles, Hall Johnson
  2. VOCALISE I, Carlos Simon
  3. Strings in the Earth and Air, Theo Morrison
  4. O Cool is the Valley Now, Theo Morrison
  5. Lightly Come or Lightly Go, Theo Morrison
  6. Now, O Now, in this Brown Land, Theo Morrison
  7. I Hear an Army Charging Upon the Land, Theo Morrison
  8. VOCALISE II, Carlos Simon
  9. Humoresque, Robert L. Morris
  10. Gospel Blues, Robert L. Morris
  11. Juba: Ev’rytime I Feel the Spirit, Robert L. Morris
  12. Fly Me to the Moon, arr. John Holiday
  13. Summertime, arr. John Holiday
  14. VOCALISE III, Carlos Simon
  15. Strange Fruit, arr. John Holiday
  16. Prayer, H. Leslie Adams
  17. The Heart of a Woman, H. Leslie Adams
  18. Night Song, H. Leslie Adams
  19. Sence You Went Away, H. Leslie Adams
  20. Over My Head and Amazing Grace, arr. John Holiday

Deaf Singer ALI Stuns the Judges on ‘The Voice’ With a Soulful Take on “Killing Me Softly”

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ALI walked onto The Voice stage for Season 23’s blind auditions and delivered a performance of “Killing Me Softly with His Song” that stopped the room cold. Then she revealed she was born deaf and wears two hearing aids, and the room got even quieter. Kelly Clarkson and Chance the Rapper both turned their chairs. ALI chose Clarkson as her coach, a full-circle moment for a singer who grew up in Walnut, California listening to Clarkson songs her uncle burned onto CDs for her.

Darryl “DMC” McDaniels and Public Enemy Veterans Unite as New Hip-Hop Power Group FREEDOM

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Three architects of hip-hop history have joined forces. Darryl “DMC” McDaniels, DJ Johnny Juice, and Brian Hardgroove, both veterans of Public Enemy, have formed FREEDOM, a new group built to bridge rock, hip-hop, and social consciousness. Their debut single, “I’m On Your Side,” arrives May 15, 2026 through Worldwide Entertainment Group, The Orchard, and JRB Innovations.

“I’m On Your Side” isn’t background music. It’s a direct response to a polarized world, a track about reclaiming your voice when truth and democracy feel like contested territory. The song pairs hard-hitting beats with lyrics that demand engagement, not just passive listening. It’s an anthem with real stakes behind it.

The music video was filmed in New York in a single day, directed by Simon Kinney of Synergy Group Productions, whose credits include Pink, Metallica, and Ed Sheeran. An additional shoot took place in Santa Fe, co-directed by Zay Santos of Santa Fe Stockyards. The result is a visual that matches the song’s urgency.

FREEDOM is also launching a fan community platform alongside the single, giving listeners a way to connect directly with the group’s message. Exclusive merchandise drops as part of the official launch.

McDaniels, Juice, and Hardgroove carry serious individual weight. Together, FREEDOM has the kind of combined credibility that doesn’t need a build-up. “I’m On Your Side” hits all major streaming platforms May 15th.

Riz Ahmed Turns a Children’s Board Game Into Surreal Tragedy on Saturday Night Live UK

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In a delightfully unhinged sketch from the third episode of Saturday Night Live UK, guest host Riz Ahmed plays a man whose growing fixation with the children’s game Operation spirals into genuine real-life tragedy. The surreal bit is exactly the kind of absurdist comedy that makes live sketch television worth watching. SNL UK, branded “Live From London,” premiered in March 2026 and airs live at 22:00 every Saturday on Sky, with six episodes in its first run. It’s the first British incarnation of the franchise Lorne Michaels launched in New York back in 1975.

Australian Guitar Prodigy Taj Farrant Brings His “Chapter One” Tour to the UK

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Taj Farrant has arrived in the UK, and he’s bringing everything with him. The Australian guitarist and singer-songwriter launches his thirteen-date “Chapter One” UK Tour on April 29th, opening with a sold-out show at Cheltenham Jazz Festival 2026. It’s a statement opener for a young musician who’s been making serious noise well beyond his years.

Farrant’s guitar work doesn’t fit neatly into one box, and that’s exactly the point. His playing draws from rock, blues, and pop, combining what he describes as vintage warmth with modern aggression. It hits hard and feels earned. This is the kind of tone that turns heads at festivals and holds rooms at full attention.

The resume speaks for itself. Farrant has shared stages with Carlos Santana, Buddy Guy, and the Hendrix Experience team. He’s performed alongside Rob Thomas, ZZ Top, and Christone “Kingfish” Ingram. He’s played Big Blues Bender in Las Vegas, Telluride’s Blues & Brew, and Australia’s largest blues event, Bluesfest. These aren’t footnotes. They’re the foundation.

‘Chapter One’ is his debut album, and this tour is its proper introduction to UK audiences. Farrant’s songwriting matches his playing, direct, expressive, and built on real feeling rather than flash. The performances on this run promise exactly that kind of impact, intimate venues, no distance between artist and crowd.

Tickets are available now at alttickets.com and venue box offices. The Cheltenham date is already gone, so don’t wait on the rest.

“Chapter One” UK Tour Dates:

April 29, 2026, Cheltenham Jazz Festival 2026, Cheltenham (Sold Out)

May 2, 2026, Bodega, Nottingham

May 3, 2026, The Garage, London

May 5, 2026, The Caves, Edinburgh

May 6, 2026, The Crescent Community Venue, York

May 7, 2026, Night & Day Café, Manchester

May 8, 2026, The Black Prince, Northampton

May 9, 2026, The Oast Rainham, Gillingham

May 10, 2026, Thekla, Bristol

May 12, 2026, Exeter Phoenix, Exeter

May 13, 2026, The Globe, Cardiff

May 14, 2026, The 1865, Southampton

May 15, 2026, The Waterfront, Norwich

Create Background Music That Fits Your Content with Musick AI

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By Mitch Rice

Finding background music should not take longer than making the content itself. Yet for many creators, this happens all the time. A track sounds nice but does not match the mood. Another one fits the rhythm but feels too generic. Sometimes, the perfect song simply does not exist in the music library.

Musick AI gives creators a simpler option: create music based on the feeling, style, and purpose of the project. With this AI Music Generator, users can describe the kind of song they want, choose whether the track should be instrumental, and explore different music styles directly on the site.

For videos, podcasts, ads, school projects, or personal creative work, this means the music can be built around the content instead of forcing the content to fit an existing track.

I. Why Background Music Is Hard to Choose

1. Good music is not always the right music

A song can sound professional and still feel wrong for a video. A soft travel clip may not need dramatic music. A product demo may need something clean and steady. A podcast intro may need a short piece that feels warm but does not distract from the voice.

The problem is not always the quality of the music. The problem is fit.

That is why custom music can be helpful. Instead of searching through endless tracks, users can tell Musick AI what they need: the mood, genre, theme, and purpose.

2. Music changes how content feels

Background music affects pacing, emotion, and attention. A calm piano track can make a tutorial feel clear and focused. A bright pop instrumental can make a vlog feel more friendly. A stronger beat can help a short product video feel more energetic.

Before creating a track, it helps to ask:

What is this content for?

What should the viewer feel?

Should the music include vocals or stay instrumental?

These simple questions make the prompt much easier to write.

II. What Musick AI Can Help You Create

1. Music from a text description

Musick AI lets users create songs by entering a description. The description can include genre, mood, topic, instruments, or use case.

For example:

“Create a cheerful pop instrumental for a travel vlog, with bright guitar, soft drums, and a warm mood.”

This is more useful than typing only “happy music” because it gives the tool a clearer direction.

2. Instrumental music for videos and voiceovers

For many creators, instrumental music is the safest choice. Lyrics can compete with narration, captions, product explanations, or dialogue.

On Musick AI, users can choose the instrumental option when they want music without vocals. This works well for:

YouTube videos

Product demos

Podcast background music

Study or tutorial content

Social media clips

A good prompt could be:

“Create a calm instrumental track for a study video, with soft piano and a focused mood.”

III. How to Write a Better Music Prompt

1. Be specific about the use case

A vague prompt usually gives a vague result. Instead of writing:

“Make relaxing music.”

Try:

“Create a relaxing instrumental track for a sunset travel video, with soft guitar, light percussion, and a peaceful mood.”

This tells Musick AI what the music is for and how it should feel.

2. Combine genre with mood

Genre alone is not enough. Pop can be happy, sad, romantic, or energetic. Jazz can feel smooth, playful, elegant, or emotional.

Better prompt examples include:

“Upbeat pop for a lifestyle short.”

“Smooth jazz for a café vlog.”

“Energetic EDM for a gaming highlight.”

“Soft classical music for a study video.”

This makes AI Music creation more practical because the track starts with a clearer emotional direction.

3. Choose vocals only when they support the project

Musick AI includes vocal gender preferences such as random, male, and female. For full songs, this can help guide the style. For background music, however, instrumental is often better because it leaves more space for speech and visuals.

For a vocal song, a prompt might be:

“Create a heartfelt pop song about missing home, with a warm female vocal preference and gentle acoustic sound.”

For background use, keep it simpler:

“Create a soft acoustic instrumental for a family memory video.”

IV. Useful Ways to Use Musick AI

1. YouTube videos and vlogs

Creators can use Musick AI to make music for intros, transitions, travel scenes, tutorials, and outros.

Example prompt:

“Create an upbeat pop instrumental for a morning routine vlog, with light drums and a friendly mood.”

2. Podcasts

Podcast music should be simple and memorable. It should support the voice, not overpower it.

Example prompt:

“Create a warm podcast intro with soft piano, light percussion, and a confident mood.”

3. Product videos and short ads

Product content often needs music that feels clean and polished.

Example prompt:

“Create a clean electronic instrumental for a product demo, with a steady beat and optimistic mood.”

4. Personal projects

Musick AI can also help with birthday videos, school projects, greetings, and creative experiments.

Example prompt:

“Create a cheerful birthday song with a bright pop style and playful rhythm.”

This is where an AI Song Maker can be useful for people who have an idea but do not know how to compose music from scratch.

V. Music Styles You Can Explore

Musick AI includes many music styles on its site, such as pop, EDM, jazz, rock, hip-hop, rap, blues, reggae, classical, country, disco, metal, R&B, K-pop, and more.

These styles help users start faster. Instead of building a song idea from nothing, users can begin with a genre and then add mood, purpose, and sound details.

For example:

“Jazz” becomes “smooth jazz for a calm cooking video.”

“EDM” becomes “energetic EDM for a gaming highlight.”

“Pop” becomes “bright pop for a lifestyle vlog.”

The more clearly the style matches the content, the easier it is to create music that feels usable.

VI. A Simple Workflow for Better Results

1. Start with the content

Think about the video, podcast, or project first. The music should support the content, not distract from it.

2. Write one clear prompt

Include the genre, mood, use case, and whether the track should be instrumental.

Example:

“Create an upbeat instrumental pop track for a short travel vlog, with bright guitar, light drums, and a happy mood.”

3. Adjust the direction if needed

If the first result feels too slow, try a more energetic mood. If it feels too busy, choose instrumental and ask for a softer arrangement. If it does not match the content, change the genre or describe the scene more clearly.

This is what makes an AI Music Maker useful: creators can test different ideas without starting from zero every time.

VII. Make Music That Belongs to the Content

Background music should feel like part of the project, not something added at the last minute. When the track matches the mood, the content becomes easier to watch, listen to, and remember.

Musick AI helps creators turn a simple description into custom music. Users can choose a style, describe the mood, use instrumental mode when needed, and create songs for videos, podcasts, ads, lessons, or personal projects.

Instead of spending hours searching for background music that almost fits, creators can make music that starts with the content itself.

Data and information are provided for informational purposes only, and are not intended for investment or other purposes.