TL;DR

Google has absorbed ProducerAI into Google Labs, combining several DeepMind models to offer AI-powered music creation. The platform uses Lyria 3, Gemini, Veo and Nano Banana models with SynthID watermarking on all outputs.

AI meets the recording studio

ProducerAI, a music creation platform that pairs generative AI with hands-on production tools, has officially joined Google Labs. The platform allows users — from beginners to established artists — to generate, edit and refine songs using natural language prompts and granular audio controls.

At its core sits a preview of Lyria 3, Google DeepMind’s latest music generation model. The model handles rhythm, arrangement, tempo and time-aligned lyrics, giving users fine-grained control over the production process. It works alongside Gemini, Veo and Nano Banana models, with all outputs embedded with SynthID, Google’s imperceptible watermarking system for identifying AI-generated content.

From prompt to production

Users can start with simple requests — “make a lofi beat” — and progressively adjust reverb, low-end punch and genre elements. A feature called Spaces lets artists create entirely new instruments and effects using natural language, from a basic keyboard to a node-based modular audio patching environment. These mini-apps can be shared and remixed across users.

The platform has already attracted established musicians including Grammy-winning rapper Lecrae and The Chainsmokers. Google’s existing Music AI Sandbox, built with DeepMind and YouTube, has seen artists like Wyclef Jean use Lyria as a creative tool during song development.

Looking forward

ProducerAI is available globally with free and paid plans. Google says its focus remains on enhancing human artistry rather than replacing it, with more creative control features planned as the Lyria 3 model develops further. The move signals Google’s growing investment in generative AI tools beyond text and image into professional audio production.