Separate production from genre
A production word is not always a genre. Glossy can describe pop, R&B, or electronic output. Textured can describe guitars, synth beds, percussion, or vocal layers.
Keep the genre anchor near the front, then use production language to control the recording surface. This avoids prompts where every word tries to define the song style.
Prompt examples
Production-focused prompt
Futuristic alt-pop, robotic lead phrasing, glossy synth hooks, layered backing vocals, crisp drums, dramatic final chorus, polished wide mix
The production words shape finish and density while alt-pop remains the style anchor.
Use density words to control arrangement
Layered, sparse, minimal, dense, and airy are arrangement instructions. They help Suno decide how many parts should compete in the same section.
If the output feels crowded, test airy or transparent. If it feels too empty, test layered or textured before changing the entire genre.
Make the mix finish specific
Words like polished, glossy, raw, blurred, crisp, and warm affect the perceived finish. Use one or two of them after the main genre and mood.
Avoid asking for glossy, raw, blurred, and crisp in the same prompt unless different sections need different finishes.