Time to Broaden my Horizon

In the rapidly evolving landscape of AI-powered music creation, Suno Studio has emerged as an exciting and powerful tool for artists.

It allows musicians, producers, and creators to generate fully produced songs from prompts, shape genres and moods, experiment with lyrics, and explore sonic territories that would otherwise require extensive studio setups. For independent creators especially, it opens doors to faster iteration, bold experimentation, and entirely new creative workflows.

For me, however, this is not just about generating music — it’s about making the music more mine.

I’ve reached a point where I want to put an even stronger personal stamp on my work. That’s why I’m now taking a closer look at what I can actually do with Suno Studio beyond the basics. So far, I’ve only scratched the surface, but even at this early stage, it already feels incredibly promising.

There is no illusion here: this will involve a lot of experimenting. A lot of trial and error. And probably a fair share of complete misfires. But that’s part of the process. Creativity has always lived in the tension between intention and surprise — and working with AI only amplifies that dynamic.

My hope is that, over time, I’ll get “under the skin” of Suno Studio. That I’ll begin to understand its nuances well enough to guide it more precisely — to bend it closer to my musical instincts, moods, and aesthetic preferences. I don’t just want to generate songs. I want to collaborate with the system in a way that allows my own artistic identity to shine through more clearly in the final result.

Right now, I’m very much at the beginner stage when it comes to using Suno Studio in a deeper, more controlled way. But even so, I’ve already managed to inject more of myself into a few tracks — whether through lyrical direction, stylistic choices, structural ideas, or subtle mood shaping.

Below are a few examples of songs I’ve been working on recently — pieces where I feel the results are starting to reflect more of my personal touch:

This is only the beginning. Expanding the horizon is rarely comfortable — but it’s always necessary. And I’m genuinely excited to see where this next phase of exploration will lead.