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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

SiteFunction
TunebatQuery BPM, key, energy, danceability (free)
ChordifyConvert any song to chords (upload or YouTube link)
MusicstaxSpotify database with key, BPM, energy metrics
ChosicGenre query, song feature analysis, market trends

11.2 How to Use Them

Want to make something similar to a reference song?

  1. Check BPM and Key on Tunebat
  2. View chord progression on Chordify
  3. Fill into Suno prompt: Similar to [song], 120 BPM, E Minor, [chord progression]

11.3 Voice Transformation Tools

ToolFunction
MusicfyAI voice conversion with presets
Kits.AICustom 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

  1. De-esser first. Heavy sibilance? De-esser before EQ.
  2. Breath control. Don’t noise-gate globally — pull down only the loudest breaths. Natural breathing sounds more human.
  3. Tail fade-out. AI vocals often cut off abruptly. Add a 20-50ms fade at the end.

11.7 Stem Import Checklist for DAW

  1. Align drum transients first — AI stems often have micro-drift. Find kick peaks and align to the same time point.
  2. 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.
  3. 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.”


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