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Real prompt testPublished Jun 29, 2026

From One Idea to a Song: A Real AI Song Prompt Test

One song idea, two prompt rounds, four generated songs, and the prompt revision that fixed the biggest story drift.

WriteSong.AI Simple Mode prompt screen with the revised One Small Light prompt

Setup

Simple Mode, Model V5, non-instrumental.

Material

One late-night lamp scene, not finished lyrics.

Output

Two prompt rounds and four public song pages.

Result

Better control, not a perfect final song.

Short Answer

To write a song with AI from one idea, start with a concrete scene, generate a first draft, then inspect the output for story drift, style drift, hook repetition, and public metadata. Do not only regenerate. Revise the prompt around the exact problem you heard or saw.

Test Transparency

This is a small public case study, not a broad benchmark. The value is in showing the prompt, the generated songs, the drift, and the correction.

  • Round 1A and Round 1B share the same lyric group, so the lyric problem is round-level.
  • Round 2A and Round 2B also share the same lyric group, so the improvement is round-level while vocal and arrangement judgment is candidate-level.
  • The revised prompt is not universally better for every genre. It improved this specific brief against the problems observed in Round 1.

Round 1: The Original Prompt

The first prompt gave the AI a concrete scene, a title, a hook, and a list of styles to avoid.

Write an intimate acoustic indie pop song called "One Small Light". The singer is awake at 2 a.m. beside a small lamp, feeling lonely but trying to believe tomorrow can be better. Start quiet and tired, then move toward gentle hope. Use "one small light" as the memorable chorus hook. Include a quiet room, a window, the lamp, and waiting for morning. Avoid generic motivational lyrics, EDM drops, rap verses, cinematic drums, and huge power-ballad vocals.

Round 1 Songs

Both candidates were usable drafts, but both shared the same narrative drift.

Round 1A3:45

One Small Light

Largest arrangement, strongest lift, least private of the four.

Public tags: indie pop, acoustic ballad, gentle edm

Open public song page
Round 1B3:43

One Small Light

More restrained than 1A, but shares the same story drift.

Public tags: indie pop, acoustic ballad, gentle edm

Open public song page

What Drifted

The prompt asked for loneliness and self-comfort. Round 1 moved toward missing someone. Short lyric signals, including "Your name in my head" and "losing you", shifted the song toward a relationship-loss frame.

The public display tags also included gentle EDM. The prompt blocked EDM drops, but it did not clearly block all electronic texture or metadata drift. That distinction matters when the song page is public.

The first generation was not bad. It was a useful draft because it showed exactly what the second prompt needed to control.

Round 2: The Revised Prompt

The second prompt kept the same idea but added sharper boundaries around story, production, and hook repetition.

Write an intimate acoustic indie pop song called "One Small Light". The singer is alone at 2 a.m. beside a lamp in a quiet room. This is self-comfort, not breakup, grief, or missing someone. Start still and tired, then turn toward quiet hope by morning. Use "one small light" as the hook, max twice per chorus. Include lamp, window, room, morning. Keep it close: acoustic guitar, soft piano, brushed percussion, warm vocal. Avoid dance beats, rap, cinematic drums, big ballad vocals, slogans.
Revised WriteSong.AI prompt in Simple Mode, cropped to remove the browser tab bar

Round 2 Songs

The revised pair stayed closer to the self-comfort brief and removed gentle EDM from the display tags.

Round 2A3:13

One Small Light

Closest match to the revised self-comfort brief.

Public tags: indie pop, acoustic, intimate ballad

Open public song page
Round 2B3:18

One Small Light

Softer peak, useful if intimacy matters more than chorus lift.

Public tags: indie pop, acoustic, intimate ballad

Open public song page
WriteSong.AI My Songs list showing the One Small Light generated candidates

What Changed

The revised prompt did not make the model obey every detail, but it made the output easier to control and evaluate.

Evidence
Round 1
Round 2
Why it matters
Story frame
Introduced absent-person cues
Stayed in self-comfort
The revised prompt fixed the biggest creative mismatch.
Display tags
indie pop, acoustic ballad, gentle edm
indie pop, acoustic, intimate ballad
Public metadata moved closer to the intended acoustic direction.
Runtime
About 3:43 to 3:45
About 3:13 to 3:18
The revised songs became more compact and easier to evaluate.
Producer read
Bigger ballad lift, less private
Smaller and more controlled
Prompt changes affected both lyric frame and production shape.

Reusable Prompt Template

Use the structure, then rewrite the genre, emotional frame, production line, and avoid list for your own song.

Write a [genre] song called "[title]". The singer is [who/where/when]. This is [emotional frame], not [unwanted story direction]. Start [opening mood], then turn toward [ending mood]. Use "[hook phrase]" as the hook. Include [specific images]. Keep it [production style]. Avoid [unwanted styles or cliches].

If you already have lyrics, start with the AI lyrics generator. If you want a broader workflow, read the step-by-step guide to writing a song with AI. For a lower-commitment entry point, try the free AI song writer.

FAQ

What is story drift in an AI song?

Story drift happens when a generated song keeps surface details from the prompt but changes the emotional situation. In this test, Round 1 kept the lamp, room, window, and morning, but shifted from self-comfort into missing someone.

Should I regenerate or rewrite the prompt?

Regenerate when the idea is right but the performance, vocal, or arrangement is not your favorite. Rewrite the prompt when the song changes the story, genre, hook behavior, or public tags.

Is a longer AI song prompt always better?

No. The revised prompt worked because it added sharper boundaries, not because it was simply longer. The most useful details were emotional frame, unwanted story direction, concrete images, and production boundary.

Why check public tags if the song sounds good?

Public tags affect how a song page is described, shared, and understood. In Round 1, the audio did not become an obvious EDM track, but the public display tags still included gentle EDM.

Read next

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Treat the first output as the first writing session.

The practical workflow is simple: idea, first song draft, drift analysis, revised prompt, then candidate comparison.

Start your own song prompt