Most people prompt Suno like they're texting a friend: "make a chill lo-fi beat." It works, in the sense that something comes out. But the gap between that and a track you'd actually release comes down to one thing — the prompt that wandered in had no structure.
After 50+ released albums made with AI tools, I've found that the prompts that consistently produce keepers all share the same anatomy. Six parts. Miss them and you're leaving the decisions to the machine; include them and you're directing.
1. Genre — the foundation everything sits on
Genre is the first and most important decision, because it carries a hundred implied ones with it. "Tech house" tells Suno about tempo range, rhythm, instrumentation, and feel all at once. Be specific and, where it helps, combine: "melodic tech house," "dark synthwave," "soulful deep house." The more precisely you name the genre, the more of the work is already done.
This is also where your own knowledge pays off most — pick a genre you actually understand, so you can judge whether the result is right.
2. Mood and energy — the emotional target
Two tracks in the same genre can feel completely different. Mood is how you steer that: euphoric, melancholic, hypnotic, aggressive, dreamy, tense. Pair it with an energy level — driving, laid-back, building, restrained. Genre sets the room; mood sets what happens in it.
3. Instrumentation — the texture you want to hear
Name the sounds that matter. Analog synths, deep sub bass, a plucky lead, warm Rhodes, gated reverb on the drums. You don't have to specify everything — just the elements that define the track in your head. Leaving it blank means Suno chooses the palette; naming it means you do.
4. Vocals — direct them or lose them
Vocals are where AI music most often gives itself away, because people leave them to chance. Decide: vocals or instrumental? Male, female, or layered? A character — breathy, powerful, robotic, intimate? Up front or sitting in the mix? Even a few words of vocal direction dramatically change how produced and intentional a track feels.
5. Production and era — the sonic fingerprint
A track's era and production style are a huge part of its identity. "80s production," "modern festival master," "vintage tape warmth," "clean and minimal." This single layer is often what separates a track that sounds current from one that sounds like a demo. It's the difference between a sound and a sound from somewhere.
6. Structure — the architecture of the song
The final part lives in the lyrics field as structural tags, and it's the one most people skip entirely. Telling Suno where the intro, verses, chorus, instrumental breaks, and outro go turns a track that meanders into one that's been arranged. A directed structure is the difference between a loop and a song.
Putting it together
You don't need all six maxed out on every track — but the more of them you decide deliberately, the less Suno guesses and the more the result is yours. Think of it as a checklist: genre, mood, instrumentation, vocals, production, structure. Run a vague idea through those six and it stops being a wish and becomes a brief.
That's the whole move — turning "make something cool" into a set of decisions a very fast collaborator can execute. The collaborator has no taste; the six parts are how you supply it.
Free: The full version of this template — the 6-part anatomy laid out with examples, plus the metatag reference and 5 ready-to-use genre recipes — is in my free Prompt Starter Kit: The Suno Prompt Starter Kit
Which of the six do you usually skip? For most people it's structure — and it's the one that changes the most.
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