THIS 23-YEAR-OLD GUY JUST MADE EXPENSIVE MUSIC STUDIOS LOOK STUPID
It is not a professional sound stage. Not a team of ghostwriters. Not some $10,000 production software.
Just a 23-year-old guy from China showing how to hijack Spotify's algorithms using nothing but a browser tab.
A year ago, getting a high-quality song onto streaming platforms meant renting studio time, hiring vocalists, or paying beatmakers every month. Now, the entire workflow sits in a single AI tool called "Suno".
Here is the twist most people miss. This isn't about automated background noise. It is about generating full, radio-ready tracks from scratch for free.
The system is brutally simple, and he breaks it down into four steps:
> The Blueprint: He starts on the main page, reverse-engineering what is already trending and viral among other creators.
> The Concept (Simple Mode): You don't need a music degree. You type a basic prompt like "write a song about flower" , and the AI drops a complete track.
> The Control (Custom Mode): This is where it gets serious. Flip one switch, and you can paste your own lyrics, dictate the exact style of music, and lock in the title. You can even strip the vocals entirely to generate raw instrumentals.
> The Pro Hack (Song Structure): The real magic happens at the end of his guide. By using simple structural brackets like [Intro], [Verse], [Chorus], and [End], you force the AI to arrange the track like a human producer.
The math gets ugly for the music industry.
No distribution fees, no splits with producers, and almost zero marginal cost after you hit "Generate."
Every lyric stays under your control.
Your tracks go straight to Spotify.
The profits stay in your pocket.
The ceiling for what one person can create from a cheap laptop just moved from "amateur AI clips" to "a private hit-factory."
Bookmark this & watch the traditional music industry die ↓