Rise and Sing
Contemporary Worship · 1:02
Create modern, congregation-ready worship music with ambient guitars, pads, and an anthemic build - from a verse, a prayer, or a single theme.
Ambient electric guitar (dotted-8th delay), synth pads, piano, bass, live drums; Hammond B3 as a bed. · 72-100 BPM
Lyrics, lead vocal & full band · free to start · yours to use
Real output from the contemporary worship song generator. Each started as a single line of text and came back with lyrics, a lead vocal, and a full band.
Contemporary Worship · 1:02
Modern Worship · 4:15
Worship Ballad · 3:44
Contemporary Worship · 4:26
BPM range
72-100
The tempo band the contemporary worship song generator writes in - slow enough to sing, fast enough to carry a room.
Takes per prompt
2
Two arrangements come back each run. Keep the one your team can actually play on Sunday.
Yours to use
100%
Royalty-free for the service, the livestream, and the channel. No reporting, no payout split.
The contemporary worship song generator turns a one-line idea into a track your band can learn in an afternoon.



Name the theme, the passage, or the feeling - "you are faithful in the waiting" is enough. Plain language works better than musical jargon here.
Usually under two minutes
This page opens with the modern sound already applied: ambient electric guitar, pads, piano, and a live kit. Change it only if you want a different tradition.
Two takes come back in about two minutes. Download the MP3, share it with the team, and chart it in whatever key suits your vocalist.
A dotted-eighth delay against the tempo, so a single note becomes a rhythmic wash. It is the signature texture of the whole style.
A synth bed holds the harmony underneath everything, which is why the room never falls silent between phrases.
Melodies sit where a mixed congregation can reach them, not where a trained soloist would show off.
Verse one is sparse. Drums enter late. The arrangement climbs so the last chorus lands with weight instead of arriving flat.
A half-step rise into the final chorus. Overused elsewhere, but it is genuinely part of this tradition's grammar.
Space at the end to repeat a line while a worship leader speaks over it, rather than a hard studio stop.

Ambient electric with delay set against the tempo, pads underneath, and a piano that plays parts instead of chords. Take those away and it stops being modern worship.

Second-person address to God, short lines, and a chorus that repeats. Written to be sung together on the second pass, not admired on the page.

Verse, chorus, bridge, key lift, tag. Your band knows this map already, which is why the track drops into a set without rearranging.

Portuguese, Spanish, Korean, Swahili and more. Write the prompt in the language your congregation worships in and the vocal follows it.
An original that fits this week's text instead of a fourth cover.
A modern sound that a younger room recognises without being told to.
Instrumental passes for the countdown, the offering, and the outro.
A quiet song written for the passage the pastor just preached.
Original music when no licensing budget exists yet, and none is needed.
A demo to argue with. Take the bridge, throw out the rest, write your own.
Yes. New accounts start with credits, enough to finish a track in the contemporary worship song generator before deciding whether to pay for more.
Yes. What the contemporary worship song generator makes is yours for services, worship sets, and livestreams, in the room and online.
The contemporary worship song generator writes the words, sings the lead, and builds the arrangement. If you already have a lyric sheet, paste it in and it will set that instead.
Between 72 and 100 BPM. Slow enough that a mixed congregation stays with the melody, quick enough that the last chorus still has lift.
Turn on instrumental mode and the contemporary worship song generator returns the same arrangement with no vocal - useful for countdowns, offerings, and sermon beds.
Yes, along with Spanish, Korean, Swahili, and others. Write your prompt in that language and the vocal follows.
Around two minutes. The contemporary worship song generator returns two different takes each run, so you compare arrangements rather than regenerate blindly.
Paste them into the lyrics box. The melody, harmony, and band arrangement are written around your text rather than replacing it.
You own what you create. Tracks are royalty-free and cleared for commercial use on YouTube, streaming, and podcasts, subject to plan terms.
A general tool returns a soft ballad. A contemporary worship song generator preloads delay-soaked guitars, pads, a late drum entry, and a key lift - the grammar of the style.
The MP3 arrives in the key the model chose. Most teams chart it and transpose at rehearsal, or regenerate and pick the take that sits better.
No. Describe the theme in ordinary words and the contemporary worship song generator handles melody, harmony, instrumentation, and mixing.
Bridges are part of the default form. Ask for "a quiet bridge before the last chorus" and the arrangement drops the drums there before the final lift.
Yes, though the texture shifts. Ask for a piano-led arrangement and the pads carry what the delayed guitar would otherwise be doing underneath.
As many as your credits allow. Most worship leaders run four or five prompts, keep one arrangement, and take that single track to rehearsal.