June 11, 2026

Sound in Givon AI: music, voiceover, and sound effects

Givon AI now includes a full sound workflow: Suno v5 music generation, expressive voiceover, voice conversion, sound effects from prompts, and vocal/instrumental separation.

Givon AI now has sound as part of the same workspace where you create video. Generate music, write or dictate voiceover, create short effects, and prepare audio assets without moving the project into separate tools.

Music generation uses Suno v5. Describe the genre, mood, tempo, and instrumentation, choose vocal or instrumental mode, and optionally provide your own lyrics. Each generation returns two tracks so you can pick the stronger direction.

Voiceover also became more expressive. Add delivery tags, pauses, and tone hints directly into the line, or record a phrase with your own delivery and have it spoken with a library voice.

On this page

What changed

Music from a prompt

Generate vocal or instrumental tracks with Suno v5 and continue a result when you want a longer version.

Expressive voiceover

Use inline delivery tags and pauses so the voice reads the line with the right emotion.

Voice conversion

Record a line with your own delivery and choose a library voice for the final sound.

Sound effects

Describe rain, impact, crowd noise, a UI click, or another effect and place the result into the project.

Music

Suno v5 tracks inside the project

Music works like the other creative modes in the prompt bar: describe the track, choose whether it needs vocals, and run the generation. For vocal tracks, Givon AI can use your lyrics or help draft lyrics from the theme.

The result appears as project media, so it can be reviewed, reused, and aligned with video scenes instead of exported from a separate music tool.

Voice

Voiceover with delivery control

Tags in the script

Mark whispering, excitement, pauses, and similar delivery cues directly in the voiceover text.

Speech-to-speech

Record a phrase, keep the delivery, and render it with a selected voice from the library.

Dictation

Speak an idea into the prompt bar when typing is slower than explaining the scene out loud.

Production

Effects and track separation

Sound effects cover short production sounds such as hits, transitions, ambient noise, rain, city texture, or interface feedback.

Track separation helps when you need vocals and instrumental parts separately for editing, remixing, or replacing one layer while keeping the other.