Airy
Airy helps shape vocal color, delivery, and performance character.
Tag taxonomy · Performance vocal
Use this hub when the singer's delivery is the missing layer. Compare breathy, smooth, gritty, high-pitched, auto-tuned, and other Suno voice tags, then move the best combinations into the prompt builder.
Tags
12
Sections
3
Best use
Start with tone, then range or effects
Priority tags
Airy helps shape vocal color, delivery, and performance character.
Breathy helps shape vocal color, delivery, and performance character.
Crisp helps shape vocal color, delivery, and performance character.
Deep helps shape vocal color, delivery, and performance character.
Gritty helps shape vocal color, delivery, and performance character.
Smooth helps shape vocal color, delivery, and performance character.
Auto-tuned helps shape vocal color, delivery, and performance character.
Distorted helps shape vocal color, delivery, and performance character.
Reverbed helps shape vocal color, delivery, and performance character.
Low-pitched helps shape vocal color, delivery, and performance character.
6 tags
3 tags
3 tags
Move between guides, formulas, taxonomies, and tag detail pages without breaking topical context.
Connect vocal tone, lyrical framing, and formula examples so voice direction stays consistent across pages.
Suno Vocal Prompts: Describe Voice, Delivery, and Emotion
Vocal direction works best when it describes tone, performance, and placement instead of only naming a singer type.
Suno Vocal Effects Prompts: Auto-Tune, Reverb, Layers, and Texture
Vocal effects should have a job. They can push the style, widen a chorus, soften intimacy, or make a hook feel synthetic and modern.
Suno Hook Lyrics Prompt Examples: Write Catchy Chorus Hooks
Start with one repeatable chorus phrase, then ask for controlled variation, bridge return, or final-line payoff so Suno can produce catchy hook lyrics that still move.
Suno Chorus Prompts: Write Bigger Hooks Without Blowing Up the Verse
A strong chorus prompt is about contrast. The hook feels bigger when the verse, pre-chorus, vocal range, and mix density leave room for release.
Suno Lyrics Prompt Examples: Themes, Chorus Hooks, and Story Ideas
A strong Suno lyrics prompt names the theme, point of view, chorus job, and emotional movement before it asks for lines.
Start from the builder, learn the core workflow, then branch into tags and reusable formulas.
Suno prompt generator
Build a prompt from genre, mood, vocal, structure, and production tags.
Suno prompt guides
Learn the workflow behind stronger prompts instead of copying isolated words.
How to Write Suno Prompts That Are Easier to Control
A clear Suno prompt is not a long word pile. It is a short production brief with style, emotion, performance, arrangement, and testing intent.
Best Suno Prompt Tags to Start With
The best Suno tags are not always the rarest tags. They are clear tags that tell the model what to prioritize.
Suno tag library
Browse searchable tags before you commit to a full prompt direction.
Use one style anchor first, then compare adjacent genre pages and formulas built from the same lane.
Suno Genre Prompts: How to Choose a Strong Style Anchor
Genre is the anchor that tells Suno what kind of song to make. Make it clear before adding mood or production detail.
Suno Genre Combinations: Blend Primary and Secondary Styles Without Drift
Hybrid prompts work when one genre stays in charge and the second style has a clear job, such as production texture, groove, vocal treatment, or atmosphere.
Cinder Orbit
Dark futuristic hybrid with robotic hooks and cinematic low-end pressure.
Hollow Cassette
Nostalgic analog pop with textured verses and a soft-focus chorus bloom.
Ghost Platform
Dark electronic pulse with clipped drums and a spoken-word lead-in.
These answers target common search questions around Suno voice tags, vocal tone tags, and how to choose the right vocal layer before opening detail pages.
Suno voice tags describe how the vocal should sound, perform, or behave. They can control tone, pitch range, vocal effects, delivery distance, and how the singer sits in the mix.
Start with one vocal-tone decision such as breathy, smooth, or gritty. After that, add pitch or effects only if they solve a specific job like chorus lift, intimacy, or synthetic texture.
Choose vocal tone first because it sets the human feel of the performance. Pitch and effects work better as second-layer controls once the singer's core identity is stable.
Open a detail page when you need pairings, example prompts, or contrast guidance. Use the builder directly when you already know the exact voice tags you want to test.
Explore more taxonomies