How It Works

JookBox is designed to move from idea to release in one continuous flow. You start with a mode that matches what you want to create, shape the output inside the workspace, organize songs into albums, and publish share-ready pages when you are ready to send the music out.

Step 1

Start with the mode that matches your idea.

The left side of the dashboard gives you six creation modes so you can start from the kind of input you actually have instead of forcing every idea into the same workflow.

  • `Clips` for quick sketches and short-form idea generation.
  • `Full Music` when you want a more complete song structure.
  • `Photo to Music` when the inspiration starts with an image.
  • `Lyrics` when the words should lead the composition.
  • `Instrumental` for non-vocal tracks, beds, and score-like ideas.
  • `Inspiration` when you want reference-driven direction.
Step 2

Describe the sound and generate.

Each mode gives you a focused input flow. You can enter a prompt, upload visual or audio inspiration, work from lyrics, or generate instrumentals depending on the direction you want. JookBox then turns that input into playable music inside the same workspace.

Step 3

Review, refine, and keep the good ones.

Once a song is generated, you can play it back immediately, regenerate, download, save it to your library, or continue shaping the visual presentation with cover art. The idea is to make iteration fast enough that exploring multiple directions still feels creative instead of technical.

Step 4

Build albums instead of leaving songs scattered.

JookBox lets you create albums directly in the dashboard, assign tracks to them, add a concept, choose a genre, and keep the release visually consistent. That means songs can move naturally from experiments into projects that feel intentional and organized.

Step 5

Publish and share when the release is ready.

When you are ready to send music out, JookBox can publish albums to public share pages with playback, artwork, and track browsing already built in. Instead of exporting files and assembling a separate presentation, the release is already prepared to send to friends, collaborators, clients, or listeners.