Thanks, David. There's another AI song writing tool that's even better, https://www.udio.com because it lets you or your students upload your own lyrics and it generates the music for you. It's also completely free at the moment.
Songs tend to be quite popular with my students, and I use them quite often in my classroom. My all-time most popular music activity involved using the Beatles’ song Ob-La-Di to teach the present simple and, later, sentence stress. The learners not only sang along, but ended up dancing enthusiastically.
Thank you for turning me onto Suno. What an amazing app. Do you know if there’s any way to print out lyrics, though? I couldn’t seem to find that feature, which would seem to be obvious.
Thanks, David. There's another AI song writing tool that's even better, https://www.udio.com because it lets you or your students upload your own lyrics and it generates the music for you. It's also completely free at the moment.
That sounds even better - there'll be a lot more fun ways to use it if you can upload lyrics! Many thanks for sharing, I'll take a look today.
Songs tend to be quite popular with my students, and I use them quite often in my classroom. My all-time most popular music activity involved using the Beatles’ song Ob-La-Di to teach the present simple and, later, sentence stress. The learners not only sang along, but ended up dancing enthusiastically.
It's great to hear that you use songs a lot, and I love that your students danced! Sounds like a wonderful activity :-)
Thank you for turning me onto Suno. What an amazing app. Do you know if there’s any way to print out lyrics, though? I couldn’t seem to find that feature, which would seem to be obvious.
You're welcome! The only way I know to print those is to 'copy and paste' from Suno's page into MS Word (or similar), then print from there.