Vocuno's song extender plugs straight into Suno, Mureka, and MusicGPT so your AI generations no longer cut off at 2 or 4 minutes.
Pick from the same providers you use for generation. Extensions inherit the original style, tempo, and key without manual prompt engineering.
Choose exactly where the original should stop and the extension should pick up — chorus tail, last bar, or a natural transition.
Steer the extension with optional lyrics or a style prompt. Drop a new verse, build a bridge, or stretch the outro into a long fade.
The extender hears the original audio, not just metadata, so the new section sounds like the same artist instead of a new generation.
Generate several candidate endings in one run and pick the one that lands the song the way you want.
Bring your own MP3, WAV, or a Vocuno library track and extend it like a native generation — great for stretching short ideas into full demos.
Pick the track, choose where it continues, and download the longer version.
Select a Vocuno generation, an upload, or paste an audio link. Suno, Mureka, MusicGPT, and your own files all work.
Add optional lyrics or a style prompt, choose how long the extension should be, and pick a provider.
Preview the longer version in-browser, A/B against the original, and download a clean file on any paid plan.
It takes a song that ends too early — typically a Suno, Mureka, MusicGPT, or short upload — and generates a new section that continues from where the original stopped. The new section preserves the style, key, and tempo of the source so it feels like one song, not two stitched together.
Suno, Mureka, and MusicGPT today. Each provider has its own continuation engine; Vocuno hands the source audio to the provider's extender and returns the merged result.
Yes. Upload an MP3, WAV, or FLAC and treat it like a native generation. The extender uses the audio itself as context, so it works on covers, demos, and field recordings — not just AI tracks.
Yes. You can pass a lyric prompt for the new section — a new verse, a bridge, or an outro — and the model will sing it in the same voice. Leave it empty for an instrumental extension or a vocal continuation in the original style.
Most providers cap a single extension between 30 seconds and a couple of minutes. You can run the extender multiple times in sequence to stretch a song further, picking the best take each time.
That is the point. The extender hears the audio, not just the prompt, so timbre, mix character, and melodic direction carry over. Hard genre swaps mid-song are possible if you push the prompt that way, but the default is seamless continuity.
Yes. Any track in your library — generations, covers, voice-converted vocals, or merged outputs — is a valid input for the extender.
Stop being stuck at the default song length. Extend your AI tracks and uploads, keep the style intact, and ship a full-length release in minutes.