GoCrazyAI
GoCrazyAI

Reveal Party Soundtracks

Gender Reveal Songs

The confetti cannon gets one shot and so does the soundtrack. Generate a reveal song with your names in it, suspense in the verses, and a drop timed for the exact second the color shows.

Any language, any style

5 free songs with every account · no credit card required

Hear real examples

Every track below was generated with this tool — press play, then make yours.

A gender reveal has exactly one job: engineer a single perfect second. The balloon pops, the smoke plumes, the cake gets cut — and everything before that second is build-up, everything after it is celebration. Generic party playlists are terrible at this, because no song from the charts knows when your color drops. A generated reveal song does: describe the moment ("suspense verses, then a huge drop into celebration"), add your names, and you get a track whose musical structure matches your reveal's emotional structure — in one to three minutes, with cover art included, ready before the confetti cannons are even loaded.

And because the lyrics are yours, the song can do something no playlist can: participate. It can tease "he or she?" through every verse, name the parents, count down the final ten seconds, and — if you want — literally sing the answer in the last chorus. The one friend who knows the secret becomes the one friend who produces the soundtrack. Every new account starts with 5 free songs, which is exactly the budget this job needs: a suspense version, both endings, and a spare for the take where the drop hits harder.

From prompt to sung lyrics

The build-and-drop

Prompt:A gender reveal song for Maya and Chris — suspense building to a huge drop when the smoke goes off

[Verse]

Maya's got the cannon, Chris is counting down from ten,

The whole backyard is guessing — half say her and half say him,

Nine months of maybes, one small envelope of fate,

Hold your breath, here comes the color — three, two, one, don't make us wait!

The song that announces it

Prompt:A playful reveal song that keeps the secret until the final chorus, then sings IT'S A GIRL

[Chorus]

Is it trucks or is it tutus? Is it him or is it her?

Every guess is in the basket and the whole room is a blur —

Well, hold on to your balloons now, 'cause the answer's finally here:

It's a GIRL, it's a girl, it's a girl — let's hear it, everybody cheer!

Song ideas to start from

How it works

  1. 1

    Describe your song

    Type one sentence — the person, the story, the vibe — or start from an example above. Any language works.

  2. 2

    Pick a style and length

    Vocals or instrumental, any genre, from a 15-second hook to a full-length track. Or write every lyric yourself in the studio.

  3. 3

    Generate, download, share

    Your song renders in minutes with cover art and its own page. Download the MP3 or just send the link.

The reveal moment needs a soundtrack, not a playlist

Watch any reveal video that went around your feed and you will notice the structure: countdown, drop, eruption. That is a musical shape — build-up, drop, celebration — and it is exactly what you should ask the generator for. Prompt for "tense, building verses, a count-in, then an explosive celebratory drop" and you get a track engineered for the moment: play it so the drop lands when the color does, and the whole party hits its peak on the same beat.

If you would rather keep all the words for the crowd, generate it as an instrumental — pure cinematic build and release under your own countdown. Songs can run anywhere from 15 seconds to several minutes, so you can make a short sharp drop-track for the moment itself and a full-length party version for afterwards. Style follows the party: a dance-floor drop for the big crowd, a swelling orchestral build for the dramatic couple, a stomping country hoedown for the backyard reveal with the truck full of colored powder.

Personalized down to the suspense

This is where a generated song runs away from anything on a playlist. Put the parents' names in the verses. Put the running family debate in the lyrics ("Grandma swears it's a boy, the neighbor's betting pink"). Keep the chorus asking "he or she?" the whole way through — and then let the final chorus resolve it, so the song itself makes the announcement. There is something genuinely great about a room full of people hearing a song say the answer out loud: half a second of processing, then the eruption, and the lyric becomes the line everyone quotes for the rest of the party.

Whoever holds the secret — the sonographer-envelope friend, the party-planning sister — can generate the resolving version without the parents ever seeing the prompt, since songs are private by default. Or hedge like a pro: generate both endings, keep them in your library, and play the right one on the day. Costs one extra song; saves the surprise. And if you have exact lines you want sung — the ultrasound date, the nickname the bump already has, the bet Grandpa refuses to drop — Lyrics mode performs your words verbatim, up to 3,000 characters, with [Verse] and [Chorus] tags to control exactly where the answer lands.

For the video everyone rewatches

Be honest: the reveal is half party, half video shoot. The clip is getting posted, sent to the group chat, and rewatched at the baby shower, the first birthday, and the eighteenth. A custom reveal song gives that video original audio nobody else has — your names, your moment, a soundtrack that exists nowhere else on the internet. These are original compositions generated from your prompt, not covers, so cover-licensing does not apply; for commercial specifics, contact support.

Practical tip from people who have timed this badly: download the MP3 in advance, do one rehearsal run so the drop lines up with the cannon, and appoint someone whose only job is pressing play. The song generates in minutes; the timing rehearsal is the part worth five of them.

After the confetti is swept

Most reveal props have the lifespan of the party — the balloons deflate, the smoke clears, the cake is eaten. The song stays. It becomes the track under the announcement post, then a line in the baby's origin story: this is the song that played the moment we found out you were you. Some families remake it after the birth with the name filled in, turning the reveal song into the first verse of a longer tradition. Every track keeps its own song page with cover art, so years later the link still plays — a two-minute museum of the day the nursery got its color.

When the baby arrives, the follow-ups are ready: a welcome song for the birth announcement, and a song with the baby's name once the name is public. The reveal is the pilot episode; the series writes itself. And if the shower is still ahead, the same ten minutes of prompt-writing covers its slideshow song too — one afternoon of generating, a whole season of soundtracks.

Frequently asked questions

Can the song be timed to the actual reveal moment?

Yes — prompt for a build-up with a countdown and a big drop, then rehearse once so the drop lands on your cannon, balloon pop, or cake cut. Short 15-second drop-tracks and full-length party versions are both possible; a sung countdown in the lyrics makes the timing nearly foolproof.

Can the lyrics keep the secret and then announce it?

That is the signature move: "he or she?" suspense through the verses, resolved in the final chorus. Have the friend who knows generate it — songs are private by default, so the surprise survives all the way to the speaker.

What if we don't know the answer yet ourselves?

Generate both endings and keep them in your private library, or have the one person who knows make the real one. You can also make a suspense-only version that never tells, and let the confetti do the announcing — the song builds the tension, the cannon delivers the verdict.

Is it free to make one?

Every new account includes 5 free songs, no credit card required — enough for both endings, an instrumental build, and a full party version. After that, songs cost 5 credits each.

How fast can I have it? The party is tomorrow.

One to three minutes per song. You can generate, listen, tweak the prompt, and have the final track downloaded before the balloons are inflated.

Can I use it in our reveal video for social media?

Yes — it is original audio generated from your prompt, not a cover, so cover-licensing does not apply, and nobody else's video sounds like yours. For commercial-use specifics, contact support.

Can it be an instrumental build instead of a song with lyrics?

Yes — Instrumental mode generates the music with no vocals: a pure cinematic build-and-drop to play under your own countdown and the crowd's reaction. Many hosts make both — the instrumental for the moment, the full lyric version for the party after.

What styles work for a gender reveal song?

Dance-pop anthems for the confetti crowd, country for the backyard party, cinematic-epic for the dramatic build, playful singalongs for a family afternoon. Match the song to the party you are actually throwing, not the one the internet throws.

Can it be sung in one of our voices?

Yes — Your Voice mode performs the song in a parent's voice from a short talking clip of that adult (about 15 seconds of normal speech, 10 credits). Dad announcing the answer in Dad's own voice is a strong closing move; those songs stay private by default.

How do we play and share it on the day?

Download the MP3 ahead of time for the party speaker — do not rely on venue Wi-Fi at the big moment — and share the song page link afterwards with everyone who missed it. The page plays in any browser with the cover art.

Make your song now

Takes about a minute to start. 5 free songs included.