Generate freely.
Own what's yours.
Subscribe to make music. Own a seed — a whole sound-world exclusively yours — and every track it makes is cleared for commercial release, forever. 1 credit = 1 song, up to ~4 minutes.
To create: subscribe
More songs every month. Upgrade anytime — we prorate it.
Spark
- 60 songs / month
- Generate · extend · style
- API + dashboard playground
- Personal & evaluation use
Forge
- 250 songs / month
- Generate · extend · style
- API + dashboard playground
- Personal & evaluation use
Inferno
- 1200 songs / month
- Generate · extend · style
- API + dashboard playground
- Personal & evaluation use
Or buy credits
No subscription, never expires.
To release it: own the seed
Here's the thing most people miss: a seed isn't one song — it's a whole sound landscape. Prompt it differently and it gives you a family of tracks that all share the same DNA. So owning a seed isn't buying a single track — it's owning an entire sound-world to explore.
Own a seed for a one-time 700 credits (≈ $100) and that whole landscape is yours: pulled from everyone else's pool forever (one of one), and every track it makes is cleared for full commercial use — forever. Then re-prompt it as many times as you want, for life. Generating is cheap (about a credit a song), so you keep spelunking your seed for new tracks for basically nothing — find the ones you love and release all of them. Buy the seed once; the songs are unlimited.
Straight talk, no gotchas: generating is free to explore, but releasing a track commercially means owning its seed. That one rule is exactly what keeps your sound one-of-one — no one else can ever release it. And it's not a per-track fee: own the seed once and you can re-roll it forever, release every track it makes, and even resell the seed later as an appreciating asset. You're not renting a song — you're buying a sound you control for life.
Browse seeds →Clean to release. Not everyone is.
EmberAudio learned from one artist's own catalog — nothing scraped, nothing stream-ripped, none of the labels' back catalog. Suno and Udio were sued by the major record labels for training on copyrighted recordings — with allegations they stream-ripped songs off YouTube. Whether music built on those catalogs is even safe to use commercially is the exact question being fought over in court. With EmberAudio there's no question — because there was nothing to take.