How to Tag Every Suno Music Style Beginning with E
↑We didn’t list every genre ever made — just the ones Suno knows how to groove with.
East Coast Hip Hop
Boom-bap beats, razor-sharp rhymes, and streetwise storytelling—this is the sound of New York’s concrete jungle, where the mic cuts deeper than the bass.
Suno style tag: [HIP HOP, EAST COAST HIP HOP] or [HIP HOP, BOOM BAP]
Easy Listening
Orchestral pop and soft vocals designed for relaxed, background listening, popular in mid-century radio and lounge settings.
Suno style tag: [EASY LISTENING]
EBM (Electronic Body Music)
A fusion of industrial and electronic dance music, featuring driving rhythms, synthetic basslines, and aggressive, minimal vocals.
Suno style tag: [EBM]
EDM (Electronic Dance Music)
A catch-all banner for big, bold electronic sounds built to move massive crowds — whether on packed festival fields or pulsing club floors. Rooted in the 1990s global dance explosion (with the U.S. and Europe steering the ship), EDM weaves together synths, drum machines, bass-heavy grooves, and the occasional pop hook or hypnotic chant. With its 4/4 heartbeat and tempos ranging from 120–150 BPM, it’s the high-octane fuel behind modern dance culture — and a gateway genre for many diving into the wider electronic universe.
File under: music that drops harder than your phone on a tiled floor.
Suno style tag: [EDM]
The Best EDM Song You’ve Never Heard Live
The EDM wave…
With his signature mouse helmet and genre-defying sound, Deadmau5 (aka Joel Zimmerman) brought progressive house into the spotlight and elevated electronic music from club backrooms to massive festival stages. His tracks like “Strobe” and “Ghosts ’n’ Stuff” showed that EDM could be both atmospheric and explosive, combining emotional depth with technical precision. He’s not just a DJ — he’s a producer’s producer, pushing the boundaries of what electronic music can be.
Some of the Best EDM You’ll Ever Hear:
- David Guetta – “Titanium (feat. Sia)”: A soaring, emotional EDM anthem driven by Sia’s powerhouse vocals and explosive drops; a defining track of the EDM-pop crossover era.
- Tiësto – “Red Lights”: An uplifting progressive house track blending acoustic guitar with bright synths and festival-ready energy — a turning point in Tiësto’s move toward mainstream dance pop.
- Marshmello – “Alone:” A melodic, bass-heavy track that mixes glitchy beats with a sense of isolation and hope; the song that helped launch Marshmello into global stardom.
Electric Blues
Blues plugged in and turned up — gritty guitar licks, thumping bass, and drums that swagger through smoky bars and city streets.
Suno style tag: [ELECTRIC BLUES]
Electro
A future-forward fusion where funk meets machine — driven by the unmistakable thump of the TR-808, rubbery synth basslines, and robotic or vocoded vocals that sound beamed in from another planet. Born in early ’80s New York and Detroit dance scenes, [ELECTRO] laid the blueprint for countless electronic styles to come with its cool, mechanical strut and breakdance-ready grooves.
File under: beats for backspins and moonwalks.
Suno style tag: [ELECTRO]
Electro Dub
Where dub’s cavernous bass and echo-drenched vibes drift through a web of electronic textures and slow, head-nodding grooves.
Suno style tag: [ELECTRO DUB]
Electro House
Big-room house with serrated synths, thundering bass, and punchy drops that hit like strobe lights in sound form — built to keep festival fields and club floors heaving.
Suno style tag: [ELECTRO HOUSE]
Electro Jazz
Where jazz’s fluid horns and improvisation dance atop electronic beats and textured loops — a genre-blurring groove that feels both timeless and future-bound.
Suno style tag: [ELECTRO JAZZ]
Electro Swing
A playful collision of roaring ’20s swing and 21st-century club culture, where brass samples, syncopated swing rhythms, and vintage vocals get remixed with modern electronic beats. Emerging from Europe in the late 2000s — France, Germany, and Austria at the forefront — this style flips dusty records into dancefloor gold, layering jazzy horns and speakeasy swagger over a steady 4/4 pulse.
Suno style tag: [ELECTRO SWING]
Electro-Industrial
A shadowy blend of electro rhythms, grinding mechanical textures, and distorted vocals — sonic fuel for gothic dancefloors and cyberpunk dreams.
Suno style tag: [ELECTRO-INDUSTRIAL] or [ELECTRO, INDUSTRIAL]
Pair with tags like [SYNTHPOP], [DARK], and [Heavy Bass]
Optional flavors adds: [Atmospheric], [Aggressive], [Male Vocals], and [80s Electronic] or [Retro Electronic]
Avoid pairing with tags like [DISCO], [High Energy], [Euphoric], [Techno], [Lo-fi]
Nothing Wrong with Electro-Industrial Evolution
Why It Matters
Depeche Mode’s “Wrong” marked a return to their darker, grittier sound—grinding synths, mechanical rhythms, and fatalistic lyrics that echoed the roots of electro-industrial. This genre pushed electronic music into harsher, more cybernetic territory, influencing everything from dance floors to dystopian soundtracks. With “Wrong,” Depeche Mode reminded a new generation that bleak can still groove—and that machines can bleed.
Electroclash
A sly mashup of ’80s synthpop, new wave, and techno—where lo-fi beats, deadpan vocals, and art-school irony strut under neon lights.
Suno style tag: [ELECTROCLASH]
Electropop
A sleek, synth-driven strand of pop where shimmering electronic textures, punchy drum machines, and hook-laden melodies reign supreme. Emerging in the late ’70s from the UK, US, and Europe, electropop pairs clean, highly produced vocals with tight 4/4 grooves and basslines built for radio waves and dance floors alike.
Suno style tag: [ELECTROPOP]
Electronic Rock
A wired-up blend of rock’s guitars, bass, and drums with the pulse and polish of synthesizers and electronic production. Born in the ’70s across the US and UK, this style layers classic rock vocals — sometimes drenched in effects — over mostly 4/4 rhythms that blur the line between analog grit and digital sheen.
File under: leather jackets meet laser beams.
Suno style tag: [ELECTROPOP]
Electronic Trap
Trap’s rattling hi-hats and swaggering rhythms get a festival-sized upgrade with EDM synths, seismic drops, and bass that could register on the Richter scale.
Suno style tag: [ELECTROPOP]
Electronica
A catch-all term for music where the machines do the talking — synthesizers, drum machines, and computers shape soundscapes that span dancefloors, art galleries, and headphone journeys alike. Emerging globally from the mid-20th century onward, electronica embraces everything from pop hooks to pure instrumental explorations, often anchored in 4/4 but unafraid to wander rhythmically.
File under: sonic playgrounds built from wires and waves.
Suno style tag: [ELECTRONICA]
Electronica, Our Weapon Of Choice
Why It Matters
“Weapon of Choice” became iconic largely thanks to Christopher Walken’s unexpected, surreal dance performance — gliding, spinning, and floating through an empty hotel lobby with effortless charisma. Directed by Spike Jonze, the Fatboy Slim‘s video flipped Walken’s tough-guy image on its head, revealing his real-life dance background and creating one of the most unforgettable visuals of the early 2000s. It’s not just a music video — it’s a cultural moment that redefined what audiences thought Walken could do.
Other incredible electronica hits you won’t want to miss:
- The Chemical Brothers – “Hey Boy Hey Girl”: A club anthem with hypnotic vocal loops and driving acid-house energy; a defining track of late-’90s big beat.
- The Prodigy – “Firestarter”: A snarling, anarchic anthem that fused breakbeat, industrial noise, and punk swagger — the track that made Keith Flint a face of ’90s rave rebellion.
- Daft Punk – “Around the World”: A minimalist masterpiece of looping funk, robotic vocals, and precision repetition — instantly iconic and endlessly danceable, (see French House).
Electronicore
Metalcore’s screams and breakdowns crash headfirst into synths, programmed drums, and EDM-style drops for a genre that moshes with a motherboard.
Suno style tag: [ELECTRONICORE]
Emo
A raw, emotionally charged strain of hardcore rock where electric guitars, bass, and drums frame lyrics that wear their heart on a tattered sleeve. Emerging from the U.S. in the mid-1980s, emo vocals swing between melodic vulnerability and cathartic screams, while 4/4 rhythms often twist and turn to match the intensity of the message.
File under: soundtracks for feelings too big to text.
Suno style tag: [EMO]
Emo Punk
Punk’s scrappy energy meets emo’s confessional heart — lo-fi guitars, unfiltered vocals, and feelings worn louder than the distortion.
Suno style tag: [EMO PUNK]
Emo Rap
Trap beats and hip hop flows laced with emo’s raw vulnerability — lo-fi textures, auto-tuned vocals, and lyrics that spiral through isolation and heartbreak.
Suno style tag: [HIP HOP, EMO RAP]
Emocore
Post-hardcore turned inside out — screamed vocals, crashing dynamics, and lyrics that bleed with raw, personal emotion.
Suno style tag: [EMOCORE] or [EMOTIONAL HARDCORE]
Enka
A sentimental strand of Japanese popular music where shamisen, accordion, guitar, and lush orchestral backings wrap around vocals rich with vibrato and longing. Rooted in the 1930s and still echoing through modern Japan, enka’s 4/4 (and occasional 3/4) rhythms carry nostalgic tales of love, loss, and life’s bittersweet turns — all delivered in the Japanese language with heartfelt intensity.
Suno style tag: [ENKA]
Epic Doom
Slow, thunderous, doom metal riffs meet soaring, operatic vocals in a myth-soaked swirl of sorrow and grandeur that feels like a funeral march for fallen gods
Suno style tag: [EPIC DOOM]
Euphoric Hardstyle
Thundering kicks and soaring synths collide in this uplifting strain of hardstyle, where emotional breakdowns and anthemic drops turn dancefloors into hands-in-the-air moments.
Suno style tag: [EUPHORIC HARDSTYLE]
Eurobeat
Popularized through Japanese media like Initial D, these blistering BPMs, turbo-charged synth hooks, and dramatic, accented English vocals — Eurobeat is dancefloor adrenaline with anime-grade flair, best consumed at high speed.
Suno style tag: [EUROBEAT]
Eurodance
A fist-pumping fusion of techno, house, and Euro disco, eurodance dominated ’90s and early 2000s dancefloors with its driving 4/4 beats (130–145 BPM), bright synths, and infectious blend of sung choruses and rapped verses. Born across European hotspots like Germany, Italy, and the Netherlands, it leaned heavily on English-language hooks and sampled vocals to fuel its global club appeal.
File under: glowsticks, whistle blows, and all-night cardio.
Suno style tag: [EURODANCE]
The Eurodance Song That You Didn’t Know You Knew
Why It Matters
Released in 1993, the track’s pulsing beat and haunting hook made “What Is Love?” a global hit, blasting in clubs, cars, and countless workout montages. But its real immortality came when Saturday Night Live spoofed it with the famous “head-bob” nightclub skits starring Will Ferrell and Chris Kattan. Those sketches became so iconic they spun off into a movie (A Night at the Roxbury) and permanently linked the song to one of the most memorable comedic bits of the ’90s. You might not know the lyrics — but you definitely know the head movement.
Europop
Breezy, danceable pop straight from Europe’s airwaves — built on synths, guitars, bass, and crisp 4/4 beats, with catchy, polished vocals (often in English, sometimes in native tongues) designed to stick like candy.
Suno style tag: [EUROPOP]
Exotica
A cocktail of jazz, Latin, Polynesian, and Eastern flavors shaken with bongos, bird calls, and dreamy vibes to conjure far-off, tiki-torch fantasies from a mid-century lounge.
Suno style tag: [EXOTICA]
Experimental
Music that colors outside the lines — breaking rules of structure, sound, and genre with strange instruments, abstract textures, and a fearless urge to explore over please.
Can be any genre, but the most common are: electronica, hip hop, house, indie, jazz, metal, pop, rock, and synth.
File under: sonic question marks.
Suno style tag: [EXPERIMENTAL]
Experimental Means Never Having to Say You’re Sorry
Why It Matters
Björk’s “Earth Intruders” pushes the boundaries of pop and electronic music through its explosive blend of tribal rhythms, distorted samples, and chaotic polyrhythms. Co-produced with Timbaland, the track defies conventional structure, layering glitchy industrial textures over marching percussion and primal vocal cadences. It’s a war cry wrapped in digital noise — a global protest song that refuses to sit still, and a bold example of experimental electronica driven by visceral rhythm instead of melody.
Got a genre that works great on Suno but isn’t on our list yet? Let us know! Whether you’ve got a favorite style, a hidden gem, or just want to ask if a genre is compatible — drop it in the comments.
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