15 secondsYouTube Intro
YouTube intros either earn the next 30 seconds or get skipped. This preset earns it — distorted guitar riff, rising whooshes, channel-mark sting at second 12.
BPM · 124–138
YouTube end-screens hold the viewer for ~10 seconds while they decide what to do next. This preset gives them space — soft pad, slow filter sweep, no drums fighting their attention.
End-screen choice happens in the viewer’s head, not their feet. Drums create forward motion the brain has to process; the outro wants the opposite — a held emotional state where the next-video decision feels relaxed, not urgent.
Most successful channels do — same key, related instrumentation, opposite energy. To match: generate your intro with this site’s YouTube Intro preset, then generate this outro and add "in the same key as my intro, mellower" to the extra prompt field.
The track ends on a held chord at second 13 with a 2-second tail. For longer end-screens, generate a 30-second extension on the same prompt — the held chord becomes a sustained pad for as long as you need.
15 secondsYouTube intros either earn the next 30 seconds or get skipped. This preset earns it — distorted guitar riff, rising whooshes, channel-mark sting at second 12.
BPM · 124–138
1 minuteVideo essays live or die on listener attention to the words. This preset takes the opposite of every other template — no hook, no melody, no drums. Just evolving texture under your voice.
BPM · 70–82
1 minuteTutorial viewers stay if the cognitive load feels manageable. This preset helps — calm electric piano, brushed drums, vinyl crackle. The music does the comforting; you do the explaining.
BPM · 78–88
1 minuteVlogs cut between voiceover and silent b-roll constantly. This preset breathes with the cuts — warm guitar strums, light percussion, hummed vocal that fills the silent moments without crowding the talkative ones.
BPM · 98–110