Focus music generator
A steady, distraction-free deep-work track you can generate here on your choice of model, ElevenLabs or Google Lyria.
Starter prompt
Focus music for deep work, ~85 BPM in C minor, steady minimal electronic pulse, warm sustained pads, a quiet repetitive bass figure, soft muted percussion well back in the mix, no vocals and no prominent melody, even and unchanging energy throughout, calm and steady, instrumental, built to fade into the background during concentration.
Generate it here
Start from a preset
One click fills the builder, then tweak anything.
A sentence is plenty — the controls below fill in the detail.
Pick any that fit.
The sounds you want to hear.
Best honoured by structure-aware models like Lyria.
Focus music for deep work, ~85 BPM in C minor, steady minimal electronic pulse, warm sustained pads, a quiet repetitive bass figure, soft muted percussion well back in the mix, no vocals and no prominent melody, even and unchanging energy throughout, calm and steady, instrumental, built to fade into the background during concentration. around 110 BPM.
Exactly what gets sent to the model.
Choose your model
Generate on licensed, commercial-cleared models, pick the one that fits.
…
Focus music works by being predictable. Anything that surprises the ear, a vocal line, a key change, a dynamic swell, pulls attention back to the music and away from the task. What helps concentration is a steady, even track that holds one energy level and asks nothing of you, so it slips into the background and stays there.
The prompt below is deliberately understated: a gentle pulse, warm pads and almost no melodic movement. Generate it here on your choice of model, then ask for a long, repetitive piece you can leave running through a full work session.
What makes a good focus-music prompt
Ask for 'no vocals' and 'no prominent melody', because lyrics and hooks are the main things that break concentration. Specify 'even and unchanging energy' and 'steady' so the track never builds or drops, and keep percussion soft and well back in the mix. A low-to-mid tempo around 70 to 90 BPM keeps energy level without being sleepy.
Tuning it to the kind of work
For analytical or coding work, a minimal electronic pulse keeps a quiet sense of momentum. For reading and writing, swap to soft piano or warm ambient pads and drop the percussion entirely. For long monotonous tasks, a slightly brighter, more rhythmic version helps, but keep the 'no vocals, steady' instructions in every case.
Start from a track you focus to
If a particular track reliably gets you into flow, reverse it to find out why. The tool detects the tempo and key and infers the energy and instrumentation, giving you a prompt that reproduces that feel across a whole session rather than leaning on one track on repeat.
Frequently asked questions
- Is this free?
- The prompt and editing tools are free; generating a full track here runs on credits, on licensed, commercially cleared models.
- What's the best tempo for focus?
- Around 70 to 90 BPM, steady and low-energy enough to stay in the background, but not so slow it becomes drowsy. The starter prompt uses 85 BPM.
- Can I use the music commercially?
- Yes, we generate on licensed, commercial-cleared models (ElevenLabs, Google Lyria), so tracks for a focus app, course or workspace playlist are cleared for commercial use.