How it works.

Likho turns a single plain-language description into three Suno-ready inputs — formatted lyrics, a style-of-music prompt, and a title — in about ten to thirty seconds. Here is exactly what happens at each step, why it matters for Suno, and what the output actually looks like.

  1. 1

    Describe it in plain language

    Start by writing a short, natural description of the song you hear in your head — the mood, the genre, the story, and the vocal style. You don't need to know any of Suno's formatting; that's exactly the part Likho takes over. A prompt as loose as “a hopeful Marathi indie song about leaving home for the city, warm male vocals” is enough to work with. If you want to steer the result faster, tap a preset chip like Sad, Marathi, or Viral Hook, or set controls like vocal gender, mood, and words to exclude. The more specific you are, the closer the first draft lands — but Likho will fill in sensible choices wherever you stay broad, so you're never blocked by a blank page.

  2. 2

    Three outputs generate in parallel

    When you hit generate, Likho doesn't write one thing at a time — it runs three outputs concurrently so the whole set arrives together in roughly ten to thirty seconds. You get full lyrics with [Verse], [Chorus], and [Bridge] metatags placed correctly; a style-of-music prompt kept under Suno's 1000-character limit with negative prompts at the end; and a catchy title that matches the vibe. Under the hood, a model tuned for creative lyric writing handles the words while music-production knowledge shapes the style prompt, and a lightweight orchestrator streams them back as they're written. You watch the song appear live rather than staring at a spinner, which makes it easy to tell early whether the direction is right.

  3. 3

    Paste into Suno and render

    Every field has a one-tap copy button, and each one is already formatted the way Suno's Custom Mode expects — so you paste the style prompt into the style box, the lyrics into the lyrics box, the title into the title field, and render. There's no manual cleanup step. If one part isn't quite right, you regenerate just that field: swap the lyrics while keeping the title and style, or vice versa, without losing the rest of your work. You can also hand-edit any line directly. The result is that the round-trip from “I have an idea” to “Suno is generating my song” collapses from a multi-tab reformatting chore into a single paste.

What makes the output Suno-ready?

“Suno-ready” isn't a vague promise — it's a specific set of rules Suno's parser enforces, and breaking any of them is what makes chatbot-generated lyrics come out wrong. Likho applies all of them automatically:

  • Metatags on their own line: [Verse 1], [Pre-Chorus], [Chorus], [Bridge].
  • Stacked modifier tags: [Chorus] [Belted] [Euphoric].
  • Parameterized tags: [Chorus: full band, big drums].
  • 30–40 lines of lyrics (Suno's optimal range).
  • Style prompts stay under the 1000-character cap with negative prompts at the end.
  • No genre or instrument descriptions in the lyrics field.
  • No artist names that Suno would refuse to honor.

Before and after: the same idea, two ways

Here's the difference in practice. Both start from the same prompt — “an upbeat pop chorus about chasing a dream, big euphoric vocals.”

A generic chatbot

Chorus:
We're chasing dreams tonight (upbeat pop, big drums,
female vocals, like Dua Lipa)
Reaching for the light, oh oh oh

The section label is prose, not a metatag. Production notes and an artist name are jammed into the lyric line — Suno will try to sing “upbeat pop, big drums, female vocals,” and the artist reference gets refused.

Likho

[Chorus] [Belted] [Euphoric]
We're chasing dreams tonight
Reaching for the light
Higher than we've ever been
This is where the story begins

The tag sits on its own line with stacked modifiers Suno reads as performance direction. The lyrics stay pure singable words. The production details (“upbeat pop, big drums”) go in the separate style prompt — exactly where Suno expects them.

Same idea, but only one of these renders the song you actually imagined. That gap — between text that looks like lyrics and text Suno can perform — is the entire reason Likho exists.