ProducerAI, an AI-powered music creation platform, has officially joined Google. This acquisition will see Google integrate ProducerAI under its Labs division, where it will be powered by a preview version of Google’s new Lyria 3 music-making AI model.
The ProducerAI platform enables users to collaborate with an AI agent to generate sounds, refine lyrics, remix existing songs, and even design new instruments through text prompts. Launched in July 2025 as a successor to Riffusion, ProducerAI initially utilized its own AI model for song generation and modification. Seth Forsgren, cofounder and CEO of ProducerAI, indicated that the team is only beginning to explore the full potential of these models with Google’s resources.
Users can interact with the AI producer much like a Gemini model, asking questions and learning about different music genres. This conversational approach allows for immediate creative work, enabling users to craft and iterate on songs with various instruments.


Elias Roman, director of product management at Google Labs, highlighted that ProducerAI’s conversational agent distinguishes it from other AI music platforms. He explained that the platform is designed for an iterative, back-and-forth creative process, rather than a single prompt-and-generate mechanism, which aligns with how quality music is typically produced.
Beyond Lyria 3 for music generation and Gemini for its chat interface, ProducerAI will also integrate Google’s Nano Banana image-generation model for creating album art and Veo for generating AI-powered music videos. These models are coordinated by the AI producer, allowing users to focus solely on their creative vision. Google will also incorporate its SynthID watermark into ProducerAI’s output, marking AI-generated text, videos, images, and audio.
The development of ProducerAI involved collaborations with artists such as The Chainsmokers, Lecrae, and Anjulie. While the music industry is increasingly adopting AI tools from companies like ElevenLabs, Udio, and Suno, many artists have also voiced concerns about AI clones. This sentiment has led platforms like Bandcamp to ban AI-generated music, and Deezer to develop detection technology to deprioritize it.
Alex Pall of The Chainsmokers expressed appreciation for ProducerAI’s evolution, noting its design is centered around the musician’s experience.
ProducerAI will operate as a standalone service within Google Labs, expanding Google’s suite of AI tools. Recently, Google integrated Lyria 3 into the Gemini app, enabling users to create 30-second tracks using various prompts.
Access to ProducerAI is available for free with a limited number of credits. Paid subscription plans include an $8 per month starter plan offering 3,000 credits for approximately 600 songs, along with Plus ($24/month) and Member ($64/month) subscriptions for higher music generation capacities. ProducerAI is accessible in over 250 countries via its website on desktop and mobile devices.

