Make the chorus the destination
A chorus should usually solve a tension problem created earlier in the song. Before writing big, anthemic, dramatic, or emotional climax, decide what the verse is withholding.
If the verse already uses maximum vocal range, dense drums, and full-width production, the chorus has less room to grow. Keep one or two layers smaller before the hook arrives.
Prompt examples
Hook-first chorus prompt
Warm dynamic pop, intimate verse vocal, syncopated pre-chorus, high-pitched chorus hook, glossy wide final chorus, polished emotional lift
The prompt uses vocal range, groove, and production width to make the chorus feel like a payoff.
Use one main hook signal
Chorus prompts get messy when they ask for every possible lift at once. Choose the main signal first: vocal height, lyric repetition, drum density, harmony stack, or mix width.
Once the main hook signal is clear, add one support layer. For example, high-pitched chorus vocal plus layered backing vocals, or dramatic chorus lift plus glossy synth width.
Save the biggest change for the final chorus
If every chorus sounds identical, ask for a wider final chorus, extra harmony layer, or emotional climax only at the end. This gives the song a reason to keep moving.
During testing, keep the same chorus idea and only swap one contrast layer. That makes it easier to learn whether range, rhythm, or production width is doing the work.