TagsSongstrukturDynamics and energy

Zeroing resolution

A reset-style ending that returns to a minimal “baseline” (stripped elements, simple tonic, or clean fade) to close the arc.

Copies

1.508

Prompt use

Use "[Zeroing resolution]" as a structure cue inside lyrics or arrangement instructions to guide movement. Section: Dynamics and energy.

Example prompt

Zeroing resolution, Build-up dynamics, Sudden shift

A reset-style ending that returns to a minimal “baseline” (stripped elements, simple tonic, or clean fade) to close the arc.

Explore related Suno workflows

Move between guides, formulas, taxonomies, and tag detail pages without breaking topical context.

Prompt foundations

Start from the builder, learn the core workflow, then branch into tags and reusable formulas.

Structure and energy control

Link section-building pages with rhythm and payoff tags so a track can scale without losing shape.

Genre and style clusters

Use one style anchor first, then compare adjacent genre pages and formulas built from the same lane.

Suno tag FAQ

What does Zeroing resolution mean in a Suno prompt?

A reset-style ending that returns to a minimal “baseline” (stripped elements, simple tonic, or clean fade) to close the arc.

When should I use the Zeroing resolution tag?

Use Zeroing resolution when the songstruktur layer should become one of the main prompt signals.

Which tags pair well with Zeroing resolution?

Pair Zeroing resolution with one clear genre, mood, or structure tag before adding more detail.

What should I avoid when using Zeroing resolution?

Avoid adding too many same-layer tags at once because it makes the result harder to diagnose.

Same section

Build-up dynamicsGradual swellRhythmic build-upIncreasing tempoKinetic ascentZenith intensityFalling tensionUnresolved tension

Next tags to test

Sudden shift

An abrupt change in key, groove, texture, or mood to shock attention and reset the emotional frame.

Unexpected shift

A surprise change that still feels musical (odd chord, new beat, new register) to prevent predictability.

Knockout transition

A hard-hitting change that lands with force (big fill, stop-time, sudden drop-in, or slam-cut into chorus).

Fluid movement

Transitions that feel continuous and unforced, often via shared tones, legato phrasing, or gentle layering.

Natural flow

Structure and transitions that feel intuitive, with section changes earned by phrasing and momentum.

Dramatic twist

A surprising structural, lyrical, or harmonic turn that reframes the moment (unexpected chord, lyric reveal, or new groove).

Joyful transition

A shift that feels uplifting or celebratory, often via brighter chords, major lifts, or sparkling texture changes.

Ominous uplift

A lift that’s still dark or uneasy (minor-key rise, tense chords, heavy textures) for bittersweet momentum.