Can I collaborate with others on Meloro?
Features · Meloro FAQ
Meloro currently operates as a personal creative tool rather than a real-time collaboration platform, but there are effective ways to work with others on AI music projects. You can share generated songs directly from the app via links, messaging apps, or social media, making it easy to send tracks to collaborators for feedback. A practical collaboration workflow involves one person generating tracks on Meloro and sharing them with bandmates, co-creators, or clients for review. The fast generation speed means you can quickly iterate based on feedback — your collaborator suggests changes, you adjust the prompt, and generate a new version in under a minute. This rapid cycle makes remote creative collaboration efficient. For more structured collaboration, you can share your prompts with others so they can generate their own variations using the same creative brief. This is particularly useful for teams working on content where multiple options are needed — each team member can generate tracks independently and the group selects the best results. Sharing prompts effectively turns Meloro into a collaborative tool where the creative direction is shared even if generation happens individually. Community features and more direct collaboration capabilities are areas of potential future development as the platform evolves.
Related Questions
Can I download my generated songs?
Yes, you can download all songs you generate on Meloro directly to your device. Every song you create is saved in your Meloro library, and you can download any track at any time. The download function is available from the song detail screen — tap the download button and the audio file saves to your device. Downloaded songs can be shared via messaging apps, email, or any file sharing method your device supports. You can also import them into other apps for editing, mixing into video projects, or uploading to social media platforms. Your song library in Meloro keeps all your generations organized and accessible. You can browse through your creation history, replay any song, and download tracks you generated days or weeks ago. There is no expiration on stored songs — they remain in your library as long as your account is active. Sharing is also built directly into the app. You can share a link to your song that others can listen to, making it easy to showcase your AI-generated music with friends, collaborators, or social media followers.
Read answerHow do I generate music with AI?
Generating music with AI on Meloro is straightforward and requires no musical knowledge. Download the Meloro app on iOS or Android, create a free account, and you are ready to start. Tap the create button and describe the song you want using natural language — for example, "an upbeat pop song about summer road trips with catchy vocals and guitar." You can optionally specify genre, mood, tempo, instruments, and whether you want vocals or an instrumental track. Hit generate, and Meloro's AI will produce a complete song in under 60 seconds. The result includes full instrumentation, song structure with verses and choruses, and AI-generated vocals if requested. You can listen to the track immediately, download it, and share it. If the first result is not quite right, tweak your prompt and generate again — each generation produces a unique composition. Free credits are included when you sign up, so you can start creating immediately without paying anything.
Read answerWhat makes a good AI music prompt?
A good AI music prompt is specific enough to guide the AI toward what you want while leaving room for creative interpretation. The most effective prompts include several key elements: genre (pop, rock, jazz), mood (upbeat, melancholic, dreamy), tempo (fast, slow, 120 BPM), instruments (piano, guitar, synths), and vocal style (male, female, soft, powerful). For example, "a chill lo-fi hip-hop beat with jazzy piano chords, vinyl crackle, and soft female vocals about rainy afternoons at 80 BPM" gives the AI clear direction across multiple dimensions. Compare that to just "make a song" — both will generate music, but the specific prompt produces a much more targeted result. You can also reference artistic styles without naming specific artists — "90s grunge rock with distorted guitars and raw vocals" communicates a clear sonic direction. Mentioning use cases helps too: "upbeat background music for a YouTube cooking tutorial" tells the AI about energy level, instrumentation choices, and structure. Start simple and iterate. If your first generation is close but not perfect, adjust the prompt based on what you hear. Adding or removing descriptors refines the output with each generation.
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