Input
HookRecord an original sung phrase, chant, chorus, or topline idea.Build a full song around your original vocal hook.
Some songs begin with the part people remember first. Record an original hook, chant, topline, or chorus idea, add lyrics and style direction, then use HumToBeats to generate a full-song starter around it.
Pair with
LyricsAdd written lyrics so the song follows visible words.Output
Full songGenerate a song starter around the voice-shaped idea.Hum melody only. No lyrics or spoken words.
Hook-first
Start from the memorable part
A vocal hook can carry melody, rhythm, pronunciation, and energy in one short recording. That makes it a stronger starting point than a plain text prompt when the chorus idea is already clear.
- Record a short original hook instead of uploading released vocals.
- Add lyrics so the generated song follows the intended words.
- Use style direction for genre, tempo feel, mood, and arrangement.
Responsible creation
Designed for original hooks, not copying songs
The Vocal Hook workflow is framed around your own voice idea. It should not be used for copyrighted acapellas, artist imitation, commercial vocal samples, or another person's voice.
- Use a hook you wrote, sang, or have permission to develop.
- Avoid artist names and requests to copy a released song.
- Keep the recording focused on one memorable phrase.
How to make a song from a vocal hook
- 01
Open Vocal Hook mode and record a short original chorus, chant, hook, or topline.
- 02
Add lyrics plus style, mood, tempo feel, and production direction.
- 03
Generate the full-song starter, then preview, remix, publish, or create an MV.
Questions before turning a hook into a song
Can I make a song from a vocal hook?
Yes. HumToBeats Vocal Hook turns an original sung hook plus lyrics and style direction into a full-song starter.
Is this voice cloning?
No. Vocal Hook is for building around your own original hook idea. It is not for cloning another person or copying released vocals.
Do I need finished lyrics?
A short lyric or chorus idea can be enough to start, but clearer lyrics usually give the generated song a stronger direction.
What kind of hook should I record?
Use a short, memorable original phrase, chant, topline, or chorus melody that represents the song's main idea.