Which AI sings songs best?
For a finished song with vocals, Suno or Udio are often the easiest places to start: they accept a text prompt, style, and can create a full track. If you specifically need an AI cover or voice replacement in an existing song, look at Musicfy, Voicestars, Lalals, and MyVocal.ai.
Can I make an AI sing my lyrics?
Yes. In generators like Suno and Udio, you can set the theme, genre, and song lyrics. Some services let you paste the full lyrics, while in others it is better to provide verses, a chorus, and a short mood description so the model does not confuse the track structure.
What is the difference between an AI song and an AI cover?
An AI song is created from scratch: the model generates the music, vocals, and sometimes the lyrics. An AI cover works differently: you take an existing composition or vocal part and change the voice, performance style, or timbre. So for songs from scratch, Suno, Udio, and Boomy are good options, while for covers, Musicfy, Voicestars, Lalals, and similar services are more suitable.
Are there free AI tools that sing?
Many services offer a free start, but limits usually run out quickly: they may restrict the number of generations, track length, export quality, or access to voice models. A free plan is usually enough for testing, while regular vocal work often requires a paid plan.
Can I upload my own voice?
Yes, some services can clone a voice or create a voice model from uploaded recordings. MyVocal.ai, Musicfy, Lalals, and dedicated AI cover tools are better suited for this. Quality depends on how clean the recording is, diction, background noise, and the length of the examples.
What should a beginner choose?
If you simply want to hear a finished song, try Suno or Udio. If you want to experiment with voices and covers, start with Musicfy or Lalals. If you need a quick musical idea without many settings, Riffusion, Boomy, or Loudly are good options.