If your Suno songs keep sounding “good but forgettable,” it’s probably not the model—it’s your structure.
Most people prompt like this: vibe + genre + topic. That’s fine, but it skips the one thing that actually makes songs stick—contrast between sections.
Here’s the practical insight: treat your prompt like a map, not a description. Instead of one blended style, define how each section should feel. Example: “intimate, stripped-down verse with soft acoustic texture → explosive, wide chorus with layered harmonies and punchy drums.” You’re guiding dynamics, not just aesthetics.
Simple action to try today:
Take one of your existing prompts and rewrite it to include clear section transitions (verse, pre-chorus, chorus). Force at least one contrast shift in energy, texture, or vocal delivery. Then generate two versions—one subtle contrast, one extreme—and compare.
You’ll start noticing that the “memorable” version usually just commits harder to change.
Question for you:
What’s one section in your current songs (verse, chorus, bridge) that feels flat—and how could you deliberately make it contrast more?