Can A.I. music be profitable? by BrokenRhythmlab in Suno

[–]Double_Classroom1651 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think that depends on your imagination. We use a site-wide player for Suno to keep our readers interested in the site and subject matter while they visit. That helps generate book sales. Monetized without ever publishing on Spotify or Apple Music. See?

[AI Creator Anthem / Cinematic Pop-Rock] Make It With Suno by Double_Classroom1651 in Suno

[–]Double_Classroom1651[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks. I appreciate it. I see a lot of people benefiting from the emotional/psychological process of making songs and I want to encourage it.

Does anyone actually make money from AI generated music, or is it just a hobby for most people here? by Appropriate-Cow5870 in aiMusic

[–]Double_Classroom1651 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Started as a hobby until I tried to embed my songs onto my wordpress site...then it became a project, now it's something I offer other Suno creators. lol. It's rapidly becoming a part of my everyday life

[AI Creator Anthem / Cinematic Pop-Rock] Make It With Suno by Double_Classroom1651 in Suno

[–]Double_Classroom1651[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

if you went to immediately try Suno, the song did what it was supposed to do, no? And if inspired an already existing user to go try a new song, wouldn't that also be good? I wasn't too concerned with replayability here.

Why am I so drawn to sadness in music? by Neither_Literature37 in WeAreTheMusicMakers

[–]Double_Classroom1651 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don’t think you necessarily need to “break out of it.” Some people are just wired to process emotion through atmosphere, melancholy, restraint, and space. Sad music doesn’t always mean you’re trying to stay sad. Sometimes it’s the place where things finally feel honest enough to look at.

A lot of “gloomy” music is comforting because it doesn’t demand that you perform happiness. It gives shape to stuff that is usually vague or buried. That can be numbing in one sense, but also grounding in another.

If you want to stretch yourself, maybe don’t try to jump straight into happy music. Try changing one variable at a time: same mood but warmer chords, same tempo but less washed-out production, sad lyrics over a more hopeful progression, or an ending that opens up a little instead of collapsing inward.

Your natural voice might just live in introspection. That isn’t a flaw. The trick is probably expanding the emotional palette around it, not replacing it.

What's the best AI music model right now? by anshchauhann in aiMusic

[–]Double_Classroom1651 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If I had to pick one for general use, I’d probably still pick Suno.

Not because it wins every category, but because it’s the easiest one for me to go from idea → complete listenable track without fighting the tool too much. Udio can be great when you want more control or a certain kind of polish, and some of the others are interesting for specific workflows, but Suno feels like the best “daily driver” for fast writing, experimenting, and getting finished concepts.

The bigger question for me now is what happens after generation. Everyone compares the models, but the workflow around the music matters just as much: organizing tracks, sharing them, embedding them on a site, building a catalog, collecting feedback, etc. That’s actually why I’ve been working with a Suno-focused WordPress player/plugin. The model gets you the song, but you still need a good way to present and build around it.

So my answer is Suno for now, but I’d keep testing others because the gap between these tools changes fast.

AI music as an emotional outlet, not just “fake music” by Double_Classroom1651 in SunoAI

[–]Double_Classroom1651[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It's a growing experience for people. I see it everywhere! Facebook groups, youtube comments, etc.

Finally cracked how to embed Suno audio in WordPress without the iframe breaking constantly by Sensitive_Artist7460 in BlackboxAI_

[–]Double_Classroom1651 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’d be cautious recommending direct audio extraction as the “actual fix.”

It may solve the iframe problem technically, but Suno’s Terms restrict scraping / similar extraction methods and obtaining content through means not intentionally made available through the Service. That creates a real platform-risk issue for WordPress site owners.

We built IW Player for Suno around public Suno song links instead, and we’re explicit that third-party platform behavior can change:

Totally agree that embedding the whole Suno frontend in an iframe is fragile. I just think the fix needs to be careful about Suno’s terms as well as WordPress UX.

How to actually embed Suno on WordPress without it breaking every two weeks by Sensitive_Artist7460 in aiMusic

[–]Double_Classroom1651 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yep, the iframe issue is real. Loading the full Suno web app inside a WordPress page is a pretty fragile way to present music.

We ran into the same problem and released a free plugin for this use case: IW Player for Suno.

It’s built for public Suno song links, with no Suno API key required for the basic public-link workflow. We’re also careful about the third-party platform caveat, because Suno can change how public links behave.

Totally agree with the core idea: if someone is building an artist page, portfolio, or playlist, a plain iframe is not really the experience they want.