Suno AI Comprehensive Guide 11: Auxiliary Tools & Resources
Music analysis sites, vocal transformation tools, DAW workflows, stem import checklists, and loudness normalization for streaming platforms. Suno tutorial on post-processing.
This is Chapter 11 of the Suno AI Comprehensive Guide. Learn to use external tools to analyze, enhance, and finalize your Suno creations.
Keywords: suno tutorial, suno prompts, suno usage, music tools, post-processing
11.1 Music Analysis Sites
| Site | Function |
|---|---|
| Tunebat | Query BPM, key, energy, danceability (free) |
| Chordify | Convert any song to chords (upload or YouTube link) |
| Musicstax | Spotify database with key, BPM, energy metrics |
| Chosic | Genre query, song feature analysis, market trends |
11.2 How to Use Them
Want to make something similar to a reference song?
- Check BPM and Key on Tunebat
- View chord progression on Chordify
- Fill into Suno prompt:
Similar to [song], 120 BPM, E Minor, [chord progression]
11.3 Voice Transformation Tools
| Tool | Function |
|---|---|
| Musicfy | AI voice conversion with presets |
| Kits.AI | Custom voice models, various pricing |
Use cases:
- Suno vocals aren’t satisfactory, want a different voice
- Sing AI-generated melodies with your own voice
- Create unique voice effects
11.4 Post-Processing Tools
Free:
- Audacity: Basic editing, EQ, compression
- BandLab: Online DAW, surprisingly capable
- GarageBand (Mac): Built-in, sufficient
Advanced:
- Adobe Audition, Logic Pro, Ableton Live, FL Studio
Stem separation (if Suno’s stems aren’t enough):
- UVR5 (Ultimate Vocal Remover): Free, good results
- Lalal.ai: Online service, free tier
11.5 Common Post-Processing
- EQ: Cut 200-400Hz muddiness, boost 3-5kHz vocal clarity, lift 10kHz+ for air
- Compression: Even out volume
- Limiter: Increase overall loudness
- Noise reduction: Remove artifacts
- Reverb: Add space if too dry
11.6 Three-Step Quick Vocal Fix
- De-esser first. Heavy sibilance? De-esser before EQ.
- Breath control. Don’t noise-gate globally — pull down only the loudest breaths. Natural breathing sounds more human.
- Tail fade-out. AI vocals often cut off abruptly. Add a 20-50ms fade at the end.
11.7 Stem Import Checklist for DAW
- Align drum transients first — AI stems often have micro-drift. Find kick peaks and align to the same time point.
- Check in Mono — many short-form platforms play mono. Fold master to mono, listen to the fullest part of the chorus. If vocals disappear or instruments vanish, there’s a phase issue.
- Vocals: dry first, then wet — Processing order: De-esser → Dynamics → EQ → Space last.
11.8 Why Platforms Change Your Volume
Spotify, Apple Music, NetEase all do loudness normalization.
Safe zone:
- Integrated LUFS: -14 to -16 LUFS
- True Peak: ≤ -1 dBTP
This gives platforms room to transcode without “sounding flat.”