Ranking content
Genre prompts need arrangement logic
The best Udio genre prompts combine style language with a clear timeline. Melodic electronic, 124 BPM, warm bass, and widescreen pads is useful, but it still leaves the model guessing how the record should unfold. Add Udio section tags such as [Intro], [Verse], [Build], [Chorus], [Drop], or [Outro] to separate texture, melody, and intensity. This helps the generation move from a sparse opening into a developed hook instead of looping one idea at the same energy level.
Build from BPM, then choose descriptors
A BPM-first Udio prompt structure keeps the groove coherent. Decide whether the track should breathe slowly, drive steadily, or sprint with double-time motion. Then describe the rhythm section and sound design in concrete terms: shuffled hats, tight transient kick, round sub bass, syncopated percussion, glassy pluck, muted chord stab, intimate room vocal, or wide atmospheric tail. Tempo gives those descriptors a grid, and the section tags tell Udio when to introduce or remove each element.
Stay artist-name-free and more precise
For search pages, ad destinations, and reusable prompt craft, avoid artist, song, and label references entirely. Udio responds well to musicological descriptors because they state the actual qualities you want: harmonic density, rhythmic swing, timbral brightness, stereo width, vocal placement, drum dryness, bass weight, and emotional temperature. VibeForge’s Vibe Board turns these decisions into clean prompt blocks so you can test variations without rewriting the whole brief by hand.