Suno V5
Generate brutal death metal with no clean vocals

Brutal Death Metal Generator

If your death metal prompt keeps coming back too clean, start here. Build around drop-tuned slam riffs, guttural lows, blast bursts, hard stops, and a no-clean-vocals mix.

Brutal Death Metal Generator

Brutal Death Metal Generator
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Brutal and slam prompt guide

Stop the Prompt from Turning into Generic Metal

Brutal death metal needs sharper instructions than heavy and aggressive. Tell the generator what to avoid, where the slam lands, and how ugly the vocals should feel.

Write the tuning and riff shape

Use Drop A, B-standard, 7-string chugs, chromatic movement, pinch harmonics, or palm-muted slams before you describe the mood.

Force the slam section

Ask for a blast section that drops into a slow slam, with hard stops and a snare that cuts through the low end.

Heavy music prompt workspace for brutal death metal

Choose ugly vocal textures

Use guttural lows, cavernous growls, harsh highs, layered roars, or instrumental mode. Say no clean vocals when you mean it.

Protect the low end

Ask for tight bass, clear kick, and raw production so the track stays heavy without turning into mud.

Brutal prompt paths

Five Ways to Push the Track Heavier

Use these prompt angles when the result needs more slam, uglier vocals, tighter low end, or a harder first hit.

Slam Riff Prompt Direction

  • Build the song around slow palm-muted grooves, not speed alone.
  • Mention Drop A or B-standard guitars, hard stops, ringy snare, and a halftime slam.
  • Keep lead guitar short so the breakdown stays heavier than the solo.

Best for pit-ready breakdowns and short violent drops.

Prompt direction visual for slam riff brutal death metal
Brutal prompt build

Write for Slam, Vocals, and Low-End Control

A brutal death metal prompt should block clean drift, place the slam, describe the vocal, and keep the low end readable.

Planning notes for a brutal death metal prompt

Tell it what to avoid

Brutal prompts work better when you block the wrong turns: clean singing, bright synths, heroic leads, and polished arena-metal choruses.

  • Write no clean vocals when the vocal must stay harsh.
  • Avoid bright lead guitar if the song should feel blunt.
  • Block keyboards or cinematic pads unless the scene needs them.

Build around the slam

Let the blast section create pressure, then drop into a slow riff that feels heavier because of the contrast.

  • Use a fast verse or blast burst before the tempo drops.
  • Name the breakdown instead of hoping the generator hears slam.
  • Add hard stops when you want the riff to hit with more space.
Guitar drum and vocal planning for brutal death metal
Arrangement workflow for a brutal death metal song

Make the vocals ugly on purpose

Brutal and slam tracks often fall apart when the vocal turns melodic. Be specific about the throat, range, and delivery.

  • Use guttural lows, cavernous growls, harsh highs, or layered roars.
  • Keep lyric lines short for fast sections.
  • Use instrumental mode when vocals would distract from the riff.

Protect the low end

Drop-tuned guitars can get huge and unreadable fast. The prompt should tell the mix where the kick, bass, and guitars sit.

  • Ask for a tight kick and bass pocket.
  • Use raw but clear production instead of muddy production.
  • Change one control per version: tuning, snare sound, vocal style, or slam length.
Prompt examples for brutal death metal generation
Use cases

Best Uses for Brutal and Slam Death Metal Tracks

Use this page when the track needs weight, guttural vocals, and hard breakdowns rather than a broad death metal sound.

Use case visual for Brutal Death Metal Generator

Slam demos and riff tests

Challenge

  • A slam riff can lose force when the drums rush past it.
  • Loose prompts often come back as thrash, power metal, or clean-sung rock with heavy guitars.

Solution

  • Set the tuning, snare sound, hard stops, vocal tone, and breakdown placement in one prompt.
  • Generate versions by changing one detail, then keep the take with the strongest slam.
Band demosRiff sketchesbrutal death metal
Use case visual for Brutal Death Metal Generator

Boss fights and horror scenes

Challenge

  • Horror and boss scenes need impact without a long build.
  • Stock metal can sound too clean, too heroic, or too polished for a brutal cue.

Solution

  • Prompt around the exact moment: boss reveal, chase, ritual room, trailer hit, or final attack.
  • Use instrumental mode when dialogue, voiceover, or sound design needs room.
Game musicHorror trailersBoss fights
Use case visual for Brutal Death Metal Generator

Short edits that need instant impact

Challenge

  • Short videos need the first riff to land right away.
  • A crowded mix can bury cuts, captions, or voiceover.

Solution

  • Ask for a cold open, direct first riff, clear slam break, and hard ending hit.
  • Keep vocals out when the track needs to sit under reels, commentary, or channel branding.
ShortsReelsCreator music

Ready to Make It Heavier?

Start with slam riffs, guttural lows, blast bursts, hard stops, and no clean vocals.

Brutal Death Metal Generator FAQ

Practical answers for getting heavier riffs, harsher vocals, clearer slams, and fewer clean-vocal surprises.







Want a broader tool first? Open Generator Music for general AI music generation.