Mood Melody — mood music generator
YOUR WORDS BECOME MUSIC
0/200
About Mood Melody: Turn Your Feelings Into Music
Mood Melody is a browser-based creative tool that turns typed words into a short musical pattern. Each letter from A to Z maps to one of ten notes drawn from two octaves of a major pentatonic scale. Spaces create brief pauses, while punctuation adds a soft chord, so the rhythm changes naturally with the length and shape of what you write. Notes play as you type, and a matching bubble rises on screen to show which character produced the sound. You can enter a single word, a sentence, or a short journal-style thought, then use Play My Melody to hear up to the first 80 characters again from the beginning. Everything runs locally through the Web Audio API, with no account, upload, or music software required.
The mood music generator is intentionally simple: it does not analyze, diagnose, or assign a meaning to your feelings. Instead, it gives written language a playful sound and visual response. Because the pentatonic notes work well together, different words produce varied patterns without requiring knowledge of scales, chords, or composition. Try typing the same phrase with different punctuation, compare a short word with a longer sentence, or use repeated letters to create a recognizable pulse. The result is not saved as an audio file, and the Share action shares the page and a short text preview rather than publishing your private recording. If you enter something personal, review the preview before choosing a social platform.
To make a melody, click or tap the text box and begin typing. Letters trigger individual sine-wave notes, a space adds timing without sound, and common punctuation produces a small three-note chord. The counter below the box shows the 200-character writing limit. Once you have typed at least one character, the replay button becomes available. Replay reads the current text from the start and temporarily disables the button until the sequence finishes, preventing overlapping full-length playback. You can still clear or edit the text in the input field and create another pattern. On phones and tablets, the same controls work with the on-screen keyboard; headphones can make quieter notes easier to hear, but keep the volume at a comfortable level.
Mood Melody works best as a small creative experiment rather than a conventional song editor. It does not provide a timeline, instrument selection, recording export, or precise tempo controls. Those limits keep the interaction immediate: write something, notice how the spacing changes the rhythm, replay it, and move on whenever you are ready. If no sound plays, check that the browser tab is not muted and interact with the text box once, since browsers require a user gesture before starting audio. The experience supports modern browsers with Web Audio API support and uses only generated tones, so it does not stream external music files. For another sound-focused activity, explore Soundscape; for a visual creative tool, try Sand Mandala or Ink in Water.