London-based AI audio unicorn ElevenLabs has unveiled a new tool that lets users create fully-produced music tracks simply by typing a prompt.
Eleven Music allows businesses, content creators, artists and everyday users to generate high-quality, studio-grade music using plain language.
It is said to offer detailed control over everything from genre and structure to the inclusion of vocals or instruments.
The platform also supports multiple languages, including English, Spanish, German and Japanese, whilst enabling users to edit either specific sections or an entire track – including both sound and lyrics.
Developed in collaboration with labels, publishers and artists, Eleven Music has been cleared for a wide range of commercial uses.
These include TV, film, podcasts, ads, gaming and social media content, depending on the user’s subscription plan.
It comes six months after the firm raised a Series C funding round which valued it at $3.3bn.
ElevenLabs, which made the Top 100 Rising European Startups for 2025 list by Viva Technology as well as Tech Nation’s Future Fifty this year, says the new service marks a major milestone in its goal to become the world’s most complete AI audio platform.
The company’s website now hosts the tool for immediate use, with public API access and integration into its Conversational AI platform expected to follow soon.
“At launch, Eleven Music is embedded in the creative platform, helping creators add rich soundtracks to voice-overs and narrations, while enabling media and entertainment teams to build more immersive stories across film, TV, gaming, advertising, and beyond,” said Mati Staniszewski, co-founder of ElevenLabs.
“Over time we’ll also integrate the music model into conversational agents – for audio-first experiences like meditation and fitness apps, hardware toys and assistants and even for simpler everyday agents that need a background track to make it more pleasurable while end users wait for an agent function to run.
“What excites me most about launch today are the use cases we haven’t even imagined yet – ones our users will define with this new generation of technology.”
Mastercard sponsors non-league club with world’s longest name