Create custom tracks fast with AI music generators
MuseForge is an AI music generator that creates multi-track arrangements, stems, and MIDI from simple prompts, sketches, or reference tracks. Its primary capability is DAW-ready output—separate WAV stems, tempo maps, and editable MIDI—to speed iteration for producers and post teams. A distinct style-morphing slider blends genres while preserving harmonic structure, giving game composers, indie producers, and content creators granular control. Pricing is accessible: MuseForge offers a freemium tier for basic exports and paid plans that unlock high-resolution stems and collaborative studio features within the AI music generators category.
MuseForge launched in 2020 as a hybrid AI music generator and sample-synthesis studio designed to reduce composition friction for working musicians and audio teams. Created by audio engineers and machine learning researchers, MuseForge positions itself between loop libraries and opaque generative tools by delivering transparent, editable outputs. Its core value proposition is rapid, production-ready music generation that plugs into professional workflows: renders include discrete stems, syncable tempo metadata, and an editable MIDI backbone so users refine arrangements in a DAW rather than rebuild tracks. The platform supports professional 24-bit exports and user sample layering, balancing pro-level control with one-click generation for both sound designers and non-musicians.
At its core MuseForge offers four feature areas that move outputs from demo to deliverable. First, multi-track stem export produces labeled WAV stems (up to 24-bit/48k) with tempo maps and timecode markers so files drop straight into Ableton, Logic, or FL Studio. Second, the MIDI generator extracts melodies, basslines and chord pads as discrete MIDI clips, preserving velocity, swing, and quantization for direct editing. Third, the style-morphing slider blends up to three reference genres or uploaded tracks to create hybrid textures while a key-and-tempo lock maintains musical coherence. Finally, MuseForge provides arrangement templates, batch rendering, and a cloud collaboration system with versioning and per-render export history for team workflows.
MuseForge uses a freemium pricing model. The Free tier allows five full-track renders per month, 192 kbps MP3 previews, and MIDI export limited to short clips, with preview stems watermarked. The Creator plan is $14/month (or $140/year) and unlocks unlimited 3-minute WAV stem exports, full MIDI phrase export, style morphing, 10GB cloud storage and priority export queue. The Studio plan is $39/month (or $390/year) and adds 24-bit/48k exports, batch rendering, SSO, 200GB storage and multi-seat collaboration. Enterprise pricing is custom with on-premise deployment, priority SLAs, model fine-tuning, and API usage billed by audio minutes.
MuseForge finds users among indie game composers prototyping adaptive music, agencies producing licensed-free ads, and solo creators generating background scores for podcasts and videos. A lead game composer can prototype 30-second adaptive loops and cut iteration time by roughly 70%, while a YouTube producer can create channel-safe intros and lower music licensing costs by over 80% compared with buying licensed tracks. Music supervisors rely on stem exports to integrate generated material with live recordings. Compared with AIVA, MuseForge emphasizes editable stems and DAW-ready exports rather than composer-profile-driven themes, making it better for hands-on mixing workflows.
MuseForge generated a 90-second multi-track arrangement and MIDI in under a minute; stems imported into Ableton perfectly with the tempo map.
Style-morphing slider let me blend chiptune and orchestral while keeping chord progressions intact—saved hours prototyping adaptive game loops.
Great for beds and stems, but vocal generator only handles short hooks—real sung lyrics still need a vocalist.