How to Use Mureka V9: The Complete Step-by-Step Guide
This guide teaches you how to use Mureka V9 from your first account setup to advanced production workflows. You will learn how to write better prompts, turn lyrics into songs, create instrumental and multilingual tracks, clone voices responsibly, and export stems or MIDI for a DAW. The tutorial starts with a five-step beginner path, then moves into creator, producer, and advanced workflows.
Quick Start: Your First Song in 4 Practical Steps
If you are starting from zero, this is the shortest path to a usable result. Follow these four steps and you can get your first draft track ready for review in a few minutes. Start with the Mureka V9 free trial so you can test the workflow before buying credits.
Create your account and claim free credits
Sign up, confirm your account, and check that free credits are available in your dashboard before generating. Use this first session to learn the workflow and decide whether you need paid credits for production work.
Pick the right mode for your goal
Start with text-to-song for the first run. Choose lyrics-first only when you already have finished lyrics, and choose instrumental mode when you need background music without vocals.
Write a focused prompt with musical constraints
Include genre, mood, BPM, core instruments, vocal style, language, and theme in one prompt. The model performs better when your prompt is specific and production-oriented instead of generic.
Example prompt:
A nostalgic lo-fi pop song, 82 BPM, warm electric piano, soft female vocal, English lyrics about walking home after midnight in light rain.Generate, evaluate, then export or iterate
Run generation and evaluate melody strength, vocal clarity, lyric fit, and arrangement. If the output is close, revise the prompt and regenerate; if it works, download immediately or export stems/MIDI on supported plans.
💡 Pro Tip
Hear what other creators made in their first session → Browse examples.Account Setup & Understanding Credits
Mureka V9 uses credits to generate songs and unlock production features. Free credits are useful for testing the workflow, but paid credits are better for commercial projects because they provide clearer rights, downloads, and higher-volume generation. You can compare current packs and credit value on the Mureka V9 pricing page.
How to Write Prompts That Actually Work
The best Mureka prompts are specific without becoming rigid. Give the model enough musical context to make good decisions: genre, mood, tempo, instruments, vocal style, language, and story. If you need a quick product overview before prompting, check the Mureka V9 feature page.
The V9 Prompt Formula
[Genre] + [Mood] + [BPM/Tempo] + [Instruments] + [Vocal style] + [Language] + [Theme/Story]Lo-Fi Hip-Hopnostalgic, calm75 BPMpiano, vinyl crackle, soft drumsfemale, soft, breathyEnglishlate-night city study sessionBasic
sad pop song
Better
sad piano pop, female vocal, slow tempo
Best
melancholic piano pop, 72 BPM, breathy female vocal, English lyrics about missing home after rain
| Use Case | Example Prompt | Language | Expected Output |
|---|---|---|---|
| YouTube intro | Energetic electronic pop, 120 BPM, bright synth hook, no vocals, optimistic creator intro. | Instrumental | Short, upbeat branded intro |
| Mandarin pop | Modern Mandarin pop ballad, emotional male vocal, piano intro, big chorus, city nightlife story. | Mandarin | Vocal pop song with clear Mandarin phrasing |
| Game loop | Dark ambient dungeon loop, low drones, distant percussion, no vocals, seamless game background. | Instrumental | Loopable atmospheric game cue |
| Indie demo | Indie folk demo, acoustic guitar, intimate female vocal, English lyrics about leaving home. | English | Singer-songwriter style demo |
| Japanese city pop | Japanese city pop, 95 BPM, slap bass, clean guitar, summer evening vocal hook. | Japanese | Bright J-pop/city-pop hybrid |
Lyrics-First Workflow: Songs From Your Words
Use the lyrics-first workflow when you care about exact wording. Structure your lyrics with tags so Mureka V9 knows where the verse, chorus, bridge, and outro begin.
Mureka V9 Structure Tags
[Intro] | Creates an opening section. | Set mood before vocals begin. |
[Verse] | Defines story or narrative sections. | Use for lyric development. |
[Pre Chorus] | Builds tension into the hook. | Use before a bigger chorus. |
[Chorus] | Marks the main hook. | Use for the most memorable lines. |
[Bridge] | Creates contrast late in the song. | Use before final chorus. |
[Outro] | Signals the ending section. | Use for fade or resolution. |
Instrumental Mode: Music Without Vocals
Instrumental mode is best for background music, podcast beds, trailers, game loops, and product videos. Say no vocals directly in the prompt and focus on mood, tempo, instrumentation, and use case.
Instrumental prompt:
Instrumental cinematic ambient track, no vocals, soft piano, low strings, subtle pulse, hopeful product launch mood.Multilingual Songs: 10+ Languages Supported
Mureka V9 can create songs in Chinese, English, Japanese, Korean, Spanish, and other languages. For best results, state the language in the prompt and provide lyrics in the target language when pronunciation matters.
💡 Pro Tip
For Chinese, Japanese, or Korean songs, avoid mixing romanized lyrics with native-script lyrics unless you intentionally want hybrid pronunciation.Stem Export & MIDI: The DAW Workflow
Stem export and MIDI are the core reason producers choose Mureka V9. Generate a strong idea, export individual parts, then rebuild the song in your DAW with your own plugins and mixing chain.
| DAW | Stem import | MIDI import | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ableton Live | ✓ | ✓ | Drag stems to audio tracks; import MIDI to instrument tracks. |
| Logic Pro | ✓ | ✓ | Works well for vocal comping and arrangement replacement. |
| FL Studio | ✓ | ✓ | Useful for beat reconstruction and melodic editing. |
| Pro Tools | ✓ | Partial | Best for audio stem mixing; MIDI workflow varies by setup. |
Remix & Style Transfer
Use Remix when you want Mureka V9 to create original music inspired by a reference. It is not the same as copying a song; the goal is to borrow style direction while generating a new composition.
Music Agent Studio
Music Agent Studio is for multi-step projects where a single prompt is not enough. Use it when you need ideation, revision, structure planning, and production decisions to happen across a longer workflow.
Troubleshooting & Common Mistakes
If you want a broader editorial assessment beyond troubleshooting, read the Mureka V9 review for strengths, limitations, and workflow tradeoffs.
Why does my generated song sound generic?⌄⌃
Your prompt is probably too short. Add mood, tempo, instrumentation, vocal style, and a concrete scene. A prompt like sad pop song gives the model too little direction.
The vocals do not match the lyrics I wrote. What is wrong?⌄⌃
Check syllable density and section tags. Very long lines can force awkward phrasing. Break lyrics into shorter lines and label each section with Verse, Chorus, or Bridge.
How do I get V9 to sing in Chinese instead of English?⌄⌃
State the language directly in the prompt and provide Chinese lyrics if you need exact wording. Do not mix language instructions unless you want bilingual output.
My stem export only shows two tracks. Where are the others?⌄⌃
Stem availability depends on plan and generation type. Some exports may group instruments together. Regenerate or check whether full stem export is enabled on your account.
Why did the song structure tags get ignored?⌄⌃
Tags work best when the lyrics and prompt agree. If the prompt asks for a short jingle but the lyrics contain six sections, the model may simplify the structure.
The voice clone does not sound like me. How do I improve it?⌄⌃
Use a cleaner sample with no background music, reverb, or noise. Record natural singing in the range you expect the generated song to use.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Mureka V9 free to use?
Mureka V9 offers free credits for testing, but serious production usually requires paid credits. Paid credits are the safest option when you need downloads, higher volume, or commercial use.
How do I write better prompts for Mureka V9?
Use a structured prompt with genre, mood, tempo, instruments, vocal style, language, and theme. Specific prompts usually produce more usable results than short prompts like pop song or sad music.
Can Mureka V9 make Chinese or Japanese songs?
Yes. Mureka V9 supports 10+ languages and is especially strong in Chinese, Japanese, Korean, and English compared with many AI music tools.
Can I export stems from Mureka V9?
Yes, stem export is available on supported paid plans. Stems are useful when you want to mix vocals, drums, bass, and instruments separately in a DAW.
Is Mureka V9 better than Suno?
Mureka V9 is better for DAW workflows, multilingual production, and stem or MIDI export. Suno is stronger for free daily experimentation and fast English ideation.