Well as in I've already technically made a couple for a bondage game developer, but I was so impressed with the results that I'm thinking about making it a regular thing. People always use music to get themselves in the mood for things and with bondage already being a niche fetish I feel like it could enhance the feel in some way.
Example: https://suno.com/song/169d013c-ff59-444 ... fb4053d254
This one is based on a villain who used to be about respect and discipline but thanks to another character lost her way and went down a dark and twisted path. Now she wants her own sense of justice by mind erasing ladies into submission. She currently has at least 100 women in servitude that have a lifestyle of being bound, gagged and serving under her. All in a obsessive attempt to mold them in the ideal submissive and polite housewife. Hence the name and theme of the song "Prim And Proper". I've done a couple of others but they're actually for a bondage game in the works so I don't want to put those out just yet without permission.
Website Migration Update
I moved the website to a new host, which I think will be more tolerant of the content this website hosts. Nevertheless, I do want to take a moment to remind everyone that the stories and content posted here MUST follow website rules, as it it not only my policy, but it is the policy of the hosts that permit our website to run on their servers. We WILL continue to enforce the rules, especially critical rules that, if broken, put this sites livelihood in jeapordy.
Thinking about using Suno AI to make tieup/bondage songs
At the risk of sounding like a an old man yelling at a cloud, I'm going to have to discourage this idea. Here we go:
Artists are genuinely suffering with the advent of AI. I used to work in the music industry and I'm still in touch with people I used to work and even live with back in the day. One of my old friends owns a studio and plays in a fairly popular tribute band that I'm not allowed to identify directly, but I CAN tell you that they play a lot of John Williams music...
According to him, AI has actually caused him to lose money because clients that commission pieces will use AI to make the song cheaper. This leaves producers and musicians not making money. They are literally losing their jobs to AI. This has already happened in the Lehigh Valley, Lancaster, and Philadelphia areas. AI is an interesting tool, but it should not be used to replace the artists. That's not to say I am opposed to AI entirely. It's a cool tool to use to get out of a creative slump. But when it's used to create a whole song, that's a problem.
Now, I understand that making music is expensive. My last foray into the studio cost me $20 an hour to record plus $75 per song for mastering. I spent a week in that studio, playing 5 songs. You do the math. That's when I realized something... There are free and cheap sources for home recording!
So what's the alternative? People that play music and either A: just want to get out there, or B: are also Tuggers. I would encourage you to reach out and find musicians on this site to create your soundtrack. And I also encourage all the other musicians (mainly keyboard/samplers) to get in on this! That would give it an extra something special! And for future projects, I offer my axe.
Anyway, sorry for the rant! Good luck in your endeavors!
Artists are genuinely suffering with the advent of AI. I used to work in the music industry and I'm still in touch with people I used to work and even live with back in the day. One of my old friends owns a studio and plays in a fairly popular tribute band that I'm not allowed to identify directly, but I CAN tell you that they play a lot of John Williams music...

Now, I understand that making music is expensive. My last foray into the studio cost me $20 an hour to record plus $75 per song for mastering. I spent a week in that studio, playing 5 songs. You do the math. That's when I realized something... There are free and cheap sources for home recording!
So what's the alternative? People that play music and either A: just want to get out there, or B: are also Tuggers. I would encourage you to reach out and find musicians on this site to create your soundtrack. And I also encourage all the other musicians (mainly keyboard/samplers) to get in on this! That would give it an extra something special! And for future projects, I offer my axe.
Anyway, sorry for the rant! Good luck in your endeavors!
I love to chat and roleplay. DMs are open.
OK, I didn't want to make this a "AI is Life Changing" vs. "Ai Is The End Of All" but since you've said your peace I should at least be allowed something to say on mine.
I've been composing music for near 30 years. I started playing piano at a very young age, learning to play songs I heard from video games, movies, and wrestling. During high school I started composing my own music. Few people cared; they just wanted me to play the stuff I heard on the radio.
I kept at it, creating more and more original compositions at this point for my own amusement. Small town. Few care. Those that did wanted me to make music for all the genres I absolutely didn't want to make them for. They wanted me to play live despite me having severe anxiety of being around a lot of people. For a while, I stopped doing music almost entirely and just stuck with drawing and writing(something else AI now is heavily prominent in as well).
Then I discovered two things that set the tone for me for the next 15 years: FL Studio and YouTube. I started putting stuff on YouTube to... ...varying results at first. I could make a song but knew nothing about mixing or mastering. Over the next couple of years I worked on that aspect and watched a lot of videos until I became at least competent in that aspect, and suddenly my videos started doing rather well. It went from 5 likes and 3 dislikes to like 45 likes and 2 dislikes. Every so often someone would want to sing or rap on something I did. I allowed it, I was just glad people finally cared enough about my music to do so.
And 9 out if 10 times it absolutely sucked. I'm not saying amateur hour. These tracks were awful. A lot of them were outright against everything that the track was about. They would take a airy chill melody with samples from a fun Genesis RPG and make it about their failed sexual conquests and such. Once every couple of years I would have something cool happen, like a cosplayer using something I made for her Soul Calibur cosplay, or ContinueShow usung a track I made, ir Totally Not Mark using a track I made. But I'm talking 3 cool moments in 15 years of trying to get something going. I was 26 when I started this; I'm 41 now a balding haieline, a crap voice, well over $2000 at least spent on this thing, and nothing else besides retail to do with my life, in a small town at least 60 miles from anything remotely substantial.
To make matters worse, YouTube, TikTok, and even SoundCloud's algorithm is hell now. If you don't know someone already a made musician or have the luckiest dsy on Earth, you could make solid gold and have all of 8 people hear it in 3 months time. That's outright depressing. What's worse is that over the last 4 years, my mixing has gotten exceptionally better than before, like night and day. Imagine really getting something down, seeing progress, and then going down to doing worse than when you started because you're not a sexually attractive paragon of charisma that can force every click to stick around for arbitrary reasons.
So two years I've been depressed and 3 months ago I finally started taking high blood pressure. I changed my diet(lost 15 pounds), switched all my habits and starting cutting out a lot of stuff that was stressing me out. I closed a account to a gaming forum I was a member of for 20 years because it got so toxic I'm convinced they hate gaming and just want a hideaway to rant about politics. I stopped playing competitive games like Rocket League and Street Fighter.
Music was next on the chopping block, because at this stage it was just a chore to me. I got absolutely nothing out of it. I felt like I had beat my head into the same glass ceiling for years and I was beginning to suffer the brain damage for it. I had sold tracks to 3 people 2 years ago for $60 each and they hadn't even attempted to do anything with it. I was going to resolve myself to turning sketches into AI art and at least be able to have some sort of self satisfaction as a bondage deviant.
I discovered Suno 2 weeks ago and it's not about making it big or even thinking I'm some big shot. My ego has withered away to nothingness long ago. For the first time in years, let me emphasize years music has been fun to me. I'm finding out that I'm damned good at writing lyrics and that if nothing else I could be a ghost writer. And it's definitely beginner friendly, but when you use it as an actual musician, and use the scripts as a actual musician, while describing the tone, depth, bpm, setting, atmosphere, type of sounds, instruments used in sounds, you get so much more out of it. I don't feel like just anyone's just waltzing in and doing what I've been doing for the last 25 years. Besides, what universal deity outside the egos of celebrities high above us has mandated that music needs to be such a trying, trial-and-error, time and soul draining affair anyway?
If I want to make something just to humor myself, I can write some lyrics with a theme, speed, style and alliteration in my mind and have it bumping in a car in a hour! If I want sonething more personal, I can upload a track I actually made to it and hear it actually sing the lyrics to the tune I made! It was such a cathartic moment when I had a song that I made 20 years ago finally get heard to its potential with actual singing and the lyrics I wrote for it. Sounding just as beautiful as if I had hired the ideal person to sing it. But because I didn't hire some ego-driven primadonna with a overly inflated self-opinion of herself to do vocals, take my tine and rake me over the coals it doesn't count?
I'm sorry, but I'm not one of those who thinks that this is the death of music. It is however drastically changing the game, and the term "adapt or perish" couldn't be more truer than it is right now. If you're a stickler for tradition who isn't the mist tech savvy person or willing to learn, the horizon might look bleak. However if you are a tech savvy person, who has a specific plan, style and lyrics that never had the resources, the location, or the access to talent to actually see their creative vision flourish, this is a game changer. I may not do bondage-related songs, but I'm using this tech to as much potential as I can get from it. If I'm being honest, I can all but guarantee so will your favorite artists and gaming composers. I'm pretty sure they've had a head start.
I've been composing music for near 30 years. I started playing piano at a very young age, learning to play songs I heard from video games, movies, and wrestling. During high school I started composing my own music. Few people cared; they just wanted me to play the stuff I heard on the radio.
I kept at it, creating more and more original compositions at this point for my own amusement. Small town. Few care. Those that did wanted me to make music for all the genres I absolutely didn't want to make them for. They wanted me to play live despite me having severe anxiety of being around a lot of people. For a while, I stopped doing music almost entirely and just stuck with drawing and writing(something else AI now is heavily prominent in as well).
Then I discovered two things that set the tone for me for the next 15 years: FL Studio and YouTube. I started putting stuff on YouTube to... ...varying results at first. I could make a song but knew nothing about mixing or mastering. Over the next couple of years I worked on that aspect and watched a lot of videos until I became at least competent in that aspect, and suddenly my videos started doing rather well. It went from 5 likes and 3 dislikes to like 45 likes and 2 dislikes. Every so often someone would want to sing or rap on something I did. I allowed it, I was just glad people finally cared enough about my music to do so.
And 9 out if 10 times it absolutely sucked. I'm not saying amateur hour. These tracks were awful. A lot of them were outright against everything that the track was about. They would take a airy chill melody with samples from a fun Genesis RPG and make it about their failed sexual conquests and such. Once every couple of years I would have something cool happen, like a cosplayer using something I made for her Soul Calibur cosplay, or ContinueShow usung a track I made, ir Totally Not Mark using a track I made. But I'm talking 3 cool moments in 15 years of trying to get something going. I was 26 when I started this; I'm 41 now a balding haieline, a crap voice, well over $2000 at least spent on this thing, and nothing else besides retail to do with my life, in a small town at least 60 miles from anything remotely substantial.
To make matters worse, YouTube, TikTok, and even SoundCloud's algorithm is hell now. If you don't know someone already a made musician or have the luckiest dsy on Earth, you could make solid gold and have all of 8 people hear it in 3 months time. That's outright depressing. What's worse is that over the last 4 years, my mixing has gotten exceptionally better than before, like night and day. Imagine really getting something down, seeing progress, and then going down to doing worse than when you started because you're not a sexually attractive paragon of charisma that can force every click to stick around for arbitrary reasons.
So two years I've been depressed and 3 months ago I finally started taking high blood pressure. I changed my diet(lost 15 pounds), switched all my habits and starting cutting out a lot of stuff that was stressing me out. I closed a account to a gaming forum I was a member of for 20 years because it got so toxic I'm convinced they hate gaming and just want a hideaway to rant about politics. I stopped playing competitive games like Rocket League and Street Fighter.
Music was next on the chopping block, because at this stage it was just a chore to me. I got absolutely nothing out of it. I felt like I had beat my head into the same glass ceiling for years and I was beginning to suffer the brain damage for it. I had sold tracks to 3 people 2 years ago for $60 each and they hadn't even attempted to do anything with it. I was going to resolve myself to turning sketches into AI art and at least be able to have some sort of self satisfaction as a bondage deviant.
I discovered Suno 2 weeks ago and it's not about making it big or even thinking I'm some big shot. My ego has withered away to nothingness long ago. For the first time in years, let me emphasize years music has been fun to me. I'm finding out that I'm damned good at writing lyrics and that if nothing else I could be a ghost writer. And it's definitely beginner friendly, but when you use it as an actual musician, and use the scripts as a actual musician, while describing the tone, depth, bpm, setting, atmosphere, type of sounds, instruments used in sounds, you get so much more out of it. I don't feel like just anyone's just waltzing in and doing what I've been doing for the last 25 years. Besides, what universal deity outside the egos of celebrities high above us has mandated that music needs to be such a trying, trial-and-error, time and soul draining affair anyway?
If I want to make something just to humor myself, I can write some lyrics with a theme, speed, style and alliteration in my mind and have it bumping in a car in a hour! If I want sonething more personal, I can upload a track I actually made to it and hear it actually sing the lyrics to the tune I made! It was such a cathartic moment when I had a song that I made 20 years ago finally get heard to its potential with actual singing and the lyrics I wrote for it. Sounding just as beautiful as if I had hired the ideal person to sing it. But because I didn't hire some ego-driven primadonna with a overly inflated self-opinion of herself to do vocals, take my tine and rake me over the coals it doesn't count?
I'm sorry, but I'm not one of those who thinks that this is the death of music. It is however drastically changing the game, and the term "adapt or perish" couldn't be more truer than it is right now. If you're a stickler for tradition who isn't the mist tech savvy person or willing to learn, the horizon might look bleak. However if you are a tech savvy person, who has a specific plan, style and lyrics that never had the resources, the location, or the access to talent to actually see their creative vision flourish, this is a game changer. I may not do bondage-related songs, but I'm using this tech to as much potential as I can get from it. If I'm being honest, I can all but guarantee so will your favorite artists and gaming composers. I'm pretty sure they've had a head start.