ProducerAI, an AI-powered music-creation platform, connecting to google. As part of the deal, Google will bring ProducerAI under the Labs umbrella and power the tool with a preview version of its new Lyria 3 music-making AI model.
ProducerAI is a music-creation platform that allows users to work with an AI agent to create sounds, workshop songs, remix songs, and even create new instruments based on a cue. platform Launching in July 2025 As the successor to AI music-making tool Refusion, and initially used the startup’s own AI models to help create songs and make changes to existing songs. Seth Forsgren, co-founder and CEO of ProducerAI, explains The Verge The team is “just scratching the surface of what these models will be able to do once we utilize everything Google brings to the table.”
“You can talk to this maker like a Gemini model, ask questions and learn about a new style,” Forsgren says. “You can really start creating as soon as you want, and you can create things with these tools and create a song and iterate on it.”
According to Elias Roman, director of product management at Google Labs, the main difference between ProducerAI and other AI music-creation platforms is the interaction with the platform’s built-in agent. “It’s not a tool that you put in your prompt, roll the slot machine and something will come out,” says Roman. “The reality is that good music isn’t made that way… and ProducerAI was really built for events happening back and forth over time.”
In addition to using Lyria 3 for music generation and Gemini for its chat interface, ProducerAI will leverage Google’s image-generation models, Nano Banana to create album art, and Vo to create AI-powered music videos. “All of these models are coordinated by your creator, so all you have to do is focus on what you want to create, and the model coordinates for you,” says Roman. Google will also embed its SynthID watermark into the output of ProducerAI, which marks AI-generated text, video, images, and audio.
The team behind ProducerAI has collaborated with The Chainsmokers, Lecrae, Anjuli and other artists to develop the platform. Even as the music industry has begun to adopt AI tools for song creation – such as those offered by ElevenLabs, Udio, and Suno – many artists have expressed frustration with AI clones. Bandcamp has banned AI-generated music from its platform entirely, while Deezer has developed technology to detect and prioritize it.
The press release includes a quote from Alex Pal of The Chainsmokers stating that the pair are “very grateful” to see how ProducerAI evolves. “It’s really designed around the musician’s experience,” says Pal.
ProducerAI will remain a standalone service after joining Labs, adding another platform to Google’s growing AI toolset. Last week, Google ported Lyria 3 to the Gemini app, allowing users to create 30-second tracks using prompts with text, images, and video.
Users can access ProducerAI for free with a limited number of credits. There is also an $8/month Starter plan that provides 3,000 credits for creating approximately 600 songs, as well as $24/month Plus and $64/month Member memberships with the ability to generate more music. ProducerAI is now available in over 250 countries, and is available to try right now from its website On desktop or mobile device.
