GoCrazyAI
GoCrazyAI

Jewish Wedding Songs

Jewish Wedding Song Generator

The hora already has its songs and the chuppah has its melodies — those are settled, and beautifully so. What your wedding is missing is the song about the two of you.

Flower-covered chuppah at dusk before the celebration, the joy a Jewish wedding song captures
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 Jewish wedding is the rare event where most of the soundtrack is already decided — and should be. The circle will form, "Hava Nagila" will do what it has done at every simcha for a century, the chairs will go up, and no algorithm has any business in that moment. This generator is for the other moments: the first dance that tells how you actually met, the parents' tribute at the reception, the song with both your names that the DJ drops when the room is full and glowing.

Give it your real story — the Hillel coffee, the seven years long-distance, the proposal that almost got rained out — and it returns an original song in one to three minutes. Ask for an English chorus with a Hebrew verse and get both; bilingual songs are where these shine, one language for everyone dancing and one for the grandparents at table two.

From prompt to sung lyrics

The first dance

Prompt:A first dance song for Dan and Rachel, who met at Hillel over bad coffee and stayed for everything else

[Verse]

Bad coffee in a paper cup, a Tuesday, nothing planned,

You laughed at something dumb I said and time got out of hand,

From folding chairs at Hillel to this floor where we now sway —

Rachel, every road I walked was walking me your way.

The parents' tribute

Prompt:A reception tribute from the groom's parents — we watched him wait for someone exactly this good

[Chorus]

Mazel tov to the boy we raised and the woman by his side,

We prayed you'd find your person, son — tonight we glow with pride,

So lift a glass, the family's here, the circle's grown by one,

Welcome home, sweet daughter — the best has just begun.

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 first dance: your story, set to music

Most couples spend weeks hunting for a first dance song that fits, and settle for one that mostly does. The alternative is a song that fits perfectly because it was written from your actual story: where you met, the inside joke, the city you survived together, the moment you knew. Two or three true details in the prompt are enough — the song does not need your whole history, just the parts you want to hear while the room watches you dance.

The bilingual version is the move for a Jewish wedding: an English chorus everyone follows, a Hebrew verse for the moment the older generation realizes what they are hearing. Transliteration in your prompt works naturally ("a mazel tov refrain," "a l'chaim toast in the bridge"), and full Hebrew script is supported too. Ask for the length your choreography needs — anywhere from a ninety-second sway to a full track.

The hora is the canon — we write the songs around it

Let's be plain about this: "Hava Nagila" and "Siman Tov u'Mazal Tov" are the hora. They are not placeholders waiting for an upgrade; they are the connective tissue between your wedding and every Jewish wedding before it, and this generator does not touch them. When the circle forms and the chairs go up, tradition drives.

What we add are the moments around the hora: the custom mazel tov anthem the DJ drops as the circle winds down and the room needs somewhere to put all that joy, the song with both your names queued for the open dance floor, the tribute that plays while everyone catches their breath. The traditional set and the personal set are not competitors — one honors where you come from, the other says who you two are.

Chuppah music belongs to your tradition

The walk to the chuppah has its own inherited soundtrack — the niggunim, the processional melodies your community knows, the music your cantor or your family has carried for generations. That is not a gap for a generator to fill, and we would be tone-deaf to suggest otherwise. Ceremony music belongs to your tradition and the people who keep it.

Our songs are for the reception — after the glass breaks, when the formality lifts and the party begins. That is where a personalized song lands the way it should: as celebration, not substitution. If you are planning the ceremony music, talk to your cantor or your rabbi; if you are planning the party, that is what the prompt box above is for.

Reception tributes and the anniversary keepsake

The reception is an open mic for love, and songs outperform speeches: the parents' tribute that welcomes a new daughter or son into the family, the bridesmaids' song about a decade of hearing about this guy, the siblings' welcome-to-the-family number played at brunch the next morning. Each starts from one honest sentence about what you want to say. Lyrics mode sings your exact words — up to 3,000 characters — if the toast is already written.

Then there is the long game: the anniversary keepsake. A song retelling the wedding day itself — chuppah to last dance — generated in your first married year and replayed every anniversary after. Some couples remake it annually with a new verse for the year just lived. With Your Voice mode, either of you can sing it in your own voice from a fifteen-second talking clip; the clone is deleted after the render and the song stays private by default.

Frequently asked questions

Can it write our first dance song from our real story?

Yes — that is the core use. Give it how you met, one inside joke, and the feeling you want, and the song comes back built around your actual story rather than someone else's lyrics that mostly fit.

Does it replace the hora or "Hava Nagila"?

No, and it never will — the hora repertoire is tradition, not a placeholder. Our songs are for the moments around it: the first dance, the reception tributes, the custom mazel tov anthem for the open floor.

What about music for the chuppah?

Ceremony music belongs to your tradition and your cantor — the processional melodies and niggunim your community carries are not something we generate. Our songs are for the reception, after the glass breaks.

Can the song be in both English and Hebrew?

Yes — bilingual verses are the signature move: an English chorus for the whole room, a Hebrew verse for the grandparents. Transliteration in your prompt works naturally, and Hebrew script is supported.

How much does it cost?

Every new account includes 5 free songs, no credit card required — enough to draft the first dance and a tribute before spending anything. After that, each song is 5 credits.

How long does a song take to generate?

One to three minutes per song, four to seven for voice-cloned versions. Even a week-of-the-wedding idea is completely recoverable — though you will want a few days to iterate on the first dance.

Can one of us sing it in our own voice?

Yes — Your Voice mode clones your voice from about fifteen seconds of ordinary talking (no singing skill required, 10 credits), performs the song, then deletes the clone automatically. A first dance in the groom's actual voice is a keepsake with few rivals.

Can we control the exact lyrics?

Yes — Lyrics mode sings your words verbatim, up to 3,000 characters, with [Verse] and [Chorus] tags. Perfect for vows you have already written or a toast the parents drafted together.

What length and style options are there?

Anything from a fifteen-second toast sting to a several-minute ballad, in any style — acoustic, orchestral, klezmer-inflected folk, modern pop. Every track is an original composition from your prompt, not a cover, so cover-licensing does not apply; for commercial specifics, contact support.

How do we get the songs to the DJ or band?

Download the MP3s or send the shareable song pages. Deliver the first dance and any tributes a week ahead with a run sheet — DJs love couples who show up with labeled files.

Make your song now

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

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