It was 3 AM, and I was supposed to launch my podcast in 6 hours. Everything was ready—edited episodes, show notes, hosting setup. Everything except the intro music. I’d spent the last 4 hours scrolling through Epidemic Sound’s library, listening to track after track that either sounded too generic or didn’t match my show’s vibe.
The clock kept ticking. My budget was $200 for the first month, and I’d already spent $180 on equipment. Hiring a composer on Fiverr? Quotes started at $150 for 30 seconds of custom music, with a 5-day turnaround. I didn’t have either.
That’s when I stumbled into AI music generation. Not as a last resort, but what turned out to be the solution I wish I’d found first. Nine months later, I’ve created intro music for three different podcast formats, and the entire process takes me less time than brewing coffee.
Before I explain my workflow, let me break down what I learned the hard way about podcast music:
I spoke with a podcast host who got hit with a copyright claim three months after launching. She’d used what she thought was “royalty-free” music from YouTube. Her episode was taken down mid-growth phase, and she lost 2 weeks of momentum while sorting it out. The fine print matters more than you think.
Stock music libraries have a problem: everyone uses them. I’ve heard the same upbeat ukulele track on at least 12 different podcasts. When your intro sounds identical to three other shows in your niche, you’re not making a memorable first impression.
Even when you find decent royalty-free music, the search process destroys your productivity. I tracked my time during that first attempt:
Total time wasted on music that didn’t even get used: 4+ hours.
Let me show you what I was looking at before switching to AI:
| Solution | Monthly Cost | Time Investment | Copyright Risk | Customization |
| Epidemic Sound | $15-49/mo | 2-4 hours searching | Low | Limited |
| Artlist | $14.99/mo | 2-3 hours searching | Low | Limited |
| Fiverr Composer | $150-300/track | 5-7 days waiting | None | High |
| Free YouTube Audio | $0 | 3-5 hours | High | None |
| DIY with GarageBand | $0 | 10+ hours learning | None | High |
None of these fit my reality: I needed something fast, unique, affordable, and legally safe.
After testing seven different AI platforms, I landed on a workflow that actually works. Here’s exactly what I do every time I need new intro music:
I don’t start with the AI tool. I start with a simple text note answering three questions:
Example from my true crime podcast:
Mood: Mysterious, slightly tense
Style: Cinematic with subtle piano
Pace: Slow build (70-80 BPM)
Duration: 30 seconds
This clarity saves me from generating 10 versions trying to figure out what I want.
Here’s where AI does the heavy lifting. I use MeloCool Music because it handles the specific requirements of podcast intros better than general music generators.
My actual prompt for the true crime show:
“Mysterious cinematic music with subtle piano melody, building tension,
75 BPM, dark atmospheric pads, minimal percussion, 30 seconds duration,
perfect for podcast intro”
The platform generates the track in roughly 30-45 seconds. What I love: it creates complete, production-ready audio—not just loops or backing tracks.
Why this works: The AI understands musical context. When I say “building tension,” it actually structures the composition with dynamic progression, not just slapping reverb on static chords.
Sometimes the generated track is perfect at 30 seconds. Other times, I need it slightly longer for my intro sequence. This is where tools like the AI music extension tool become incredibly useful.
I tested extending a 30-second track to 45 seconds. The AI maintained the original style and composition—no awkward loops or repetition. It actually composed additional measures that flowed naturally.
Pro tip: If you need a fade-out or specific ending, generate 5-10 seconds longer than you need, then trim in your editor. Much cleaner than forcing a hard stop.
Once I’m happy with the track:
Total elapsed time: 4 minutes, 15 seconds on average.
Here’s my tracked data from the last 8 intro tracks I created:
Planning & Prompt Writing: 45 seconds
AI Generation Wait Time: 30-45 seconds
Listening & Evaluation: 40 seconds
Extension (if needed): 60 seconds
Download & Import: 30 seconds
Volume/Normalization: 30 seconds
—————————————-
TOTAL AVERAGE TIME: 4 min 15 sec
Compare that to 4+ hours searching stock libraries.
I’m not going to list 15 AI music platforms. I’m going to tell you about the three I’ve actually used in production, and why I chose what I chose.
What I use it for: All my podcast intro and outro music
Why it became my go-to:
Real example: My tech podcast needed an energetic but not overwhelming intro. First generation from MeloCool gave me exactly what I needed. With another tool I’d tested, it took 5 attempts to get close.
Pricing reality: I’m on their Basic plan ($7.9/month annual). I’ve created 23 tracks so far, which comes to $0.34 per track. Compare that to the $150 per custom track I was quoted on Fiverr.
What I use it for: Final volume adjustments, trimming, fading
Why: Not AI-specific, but necessary. Even perfect AI music needs level matching with your voice. Descript makes this stupid simple with its waveform editor.
What I use it for: Creating multiple versions of the same theme
Why I don’t use it primarily: Less intuitive prompt system, more expensive for my use case. But their variation feature is excellent when I need A/B testing options.
Let me show you how this workflow adapted to three very different shows I produce:
Vibe needed: Energetic, modern, techy but not aggressive
My prompt:
“Upbeat electronic music, 115 BPM, synth-driven, energetic but professional,
bright melodies, suitable for tech podcast intro, 30 seconds”
Result: Clean synth lead with punchy drums. Sounds professional, matches the fast-paced content style.
Generation attempts: 1 (nailed it first try)
Total time including edits: 4 minutes
Vibe needed: Mysterious, serious, slightly tense
My prompt:
“Cinematic mystery music, slow piano melody, subtle strings, building tension,
75 BPM, dark and moody, perfect for crime podcast intro, 35 seconds”
Result: Haunting piano with atmospheric pads that build perfectly into the episode start.
Generation attempts: 2 (first was too dramatic, second was perfect)
Total time: 6 minutes (including re-generation)
Vibe needed: Calm, uplifting, warm
My prompt:
“Gentle acoustic guitar, warm and uplifting, soft percussion, inspiring mood,
95 BPM, morning energy, 25 seconds”
Result: Acoustic-driven track that feels like sunrise. Listeners say it’s their favorite part of the morning routine.
Generation attempts: 1
Total time: 3 minutes, 50 seconds
Let me show you actual numbers from my podcasting operation:
Traditional Route (What I Almost Paid):
Epidemic Sound subscription: $15/month × 6 = $90
Or Fiverr custom tracks: $150 × 3 shows = $450
Time searching/coordinating: ~20 hours @ $50/hr = $1,000
—————————————-
TOTAL TRADITIONAL COST: $540-1,540
AI Route (What I Actually Paid):
MeloCool Music Basic Plan: $7.9/month × 6 = $47.40
Time spent creating music: ~1.5 hours @ $50/hr = $75
Additional tools (Descript): $0 (already had for editing)
—————————————-
TOTAL AI COST: $122.40
Savings: $417-1,417 over 6 months
But here’s the real value: creative control. When I wanted to update my tech show’s intro for a special series, it took me 5 minutes. With a custom composer, that’s another $150 and 5-day wait. With stock music, I’m back to hours of searching.
I’ve created 23 podcast tracks. Only 6 were “one-and-done.” The rest needed 2-3 generations to nail the vibe. This is normal. Budget for it.
Pro tip: Keep your best 2-3 versions and test them with a friend before committing. I’ve had tracks I loved that my co-host thought were too aggressive for our tone.
My early attempts:
“Happy podcast music”
“Energetic intro”
“Background music for podcast”
These prompts generated forgettable tracks that sounded like… well, stock music.
My improved prompts:
“Upbeat indie pop with acoustic guitar, hand claps,
whistling melody, summer vibe, 110 BPM, 30 seconds”
The difference? Night and day.
I’m obsessive about this now. Every platform I use, I verify:
With MeloCool, tracks generated on paid plans come with commercial licenses. I keep a spreadsheet tracking which track came from where, just in case.
AI music is 80% of the solution. The final 20%—volume levels, EQ, fade timing—happens in your podcast editor. I spent $0 extra here because I already had Descript, but don’t skip this step.
Specific settings I use:
My mistake in month 2: I created intro music that sounded perfect on my studio headphones. On phone speakers? The bass disappeared, and it sounded thin and weak.
Now I test every track on:
I’m a fan of this workflow, but let’s be real about constraints:
If you need “exactly 4 bars of trumpet solo followed by a djembe breakdown,” AI isn’t there yet. It understands general instrumentation (“brass section,” “percussion”) but not precise musical notation.
Workaround: Generate the closest version, then hire a session musician on Fiverr for $30-50 to add the specific element. Still way cheaper than full custom composition.
I can’t tell the AI, “Keep everything but make the snare drum 20% quieter.” Adjustments require re-generation with modified prompts, which is hit-or-miss.
Workaround: Learn basic EQ in your editor. Reducing 3-4 kHz can soften harsh snares. It’s a 2-minute YouTube skill.
Some AI platforms offer vocals, but for podcast intros, the voiceover should be YOU. AI-generated voice saying your show name sounds… off. Just record your own intro voiceover.
If you generate a track, love it, then 3 months later want “the same vibe but 10 seconds longer,” the AI might give you something different. The extension tools help, but exact style matching isn’t guaranteed.
Yes, if you’re using a paid plan with commercial licensing. Read the terms. Free tiers often restrict commercial use. I’m on MeloCool’s paid plan specifically for the commercial license.
In blind tests with 8 people, nobody identified my intro music as AI-generated. The quality is there. What gives it away is if you use generic prompts that sound like stock music.
Theoretically possible, but statistically unlikely with specific prompts. I’ve never encountered it. The AI’s output space is massive when you use detailed prompts.
Absolutely. I export as WAV and have full editing rights. Want to add your own guitar over it? Go ahead. Want to remix it entirely? That’s allowed.
As of February 2026, Spotify and Apple Podcasts both allow AI-generated intro music in podcasts. The content policy restrictions apply to full-length AI music tracks uploaded as songs, not short-form podcast elements.
If you’re producing a podcast and spending either too much money or too much time on intro music, here’s what I’d do:
Budget expectation: $8-20/month depending on plan and platform.
Time expectation: After the learning curve (about 3 tracks), expect 4-6 minutes per intro track creation.
Looking back at that 3 AM panic session, here’s what I’d tell myself:
Nine months ago, I spent 4 hours and nearly hired a $150 composer for 30 seconds of music. Today, I create professional podcast intros in under 5 minutes, usually on the first or second attempt.
The technology isn’t perfect. You’ll still need basic audio editing skills. You’ll still need to learn what makes a good prompt. But the barrier between “I need intro music” and “I have intro music” has collapsed from days to minutes.
For podcasters without musical training, a tight budget, or simply limited time, AI music generation has moved from “interesting experiment” to “production tool I use weekly.”
The 3 AM panic is now a 5-minute Tuesday morning task.
AI Music Generation
Audio Editing & Mixing
Policy & Quality References
AI-generated music doesn’t replace creative decision-making—it accelerates it. By pairing precise prompts with a quick polish pass, I turned a 4-hour bottleneck into a repeatable 5-minute habit. Whether you’re updating an existing show or launching a new series, the workflow above keeps intro music on-brand, royalty-safe, and ready for distribution on every major platform. When you need a fresh variation, revisiting MeloCool Music with a refined brief gets you there fast.


