Pick your genre, lock in a word that means something to you, and get eight names built on the patterns real bands use. Every result shows the pattern behind it, so you learn what works. Tap any name to copy it.
Lock a word and every name will be built around it. Leave it blank for free range.
A generator gives you volume. These four checks turn a shortlist into a name you can actually build a brand on.
If it is awkward to say, or people will mishear it at a show, it will hold you back. The best names survive being shouted across a loud room.
Before you commit, search the name on streaming platforms and social handles. You want one nobody big is already using, with a handle you can claim.
Avoid names tied too tightly to one gimmick or one song. Your sound will evolve. A name with a little room ages far better than a clever in-joke.
Imagine the name on a flyer, an album cover, a streaming banner. If you can see the first show, you are close. If it looks right small and large, lock it in.
Almost every band name you know fits one of these shapes. The generator builds from all six, and tells you which one each result is.
A name is step one. The Music Producer's Handbook covers everything that turns a rehearsal-room idea into a release that sounds professional.
Explore the HandbookNaming the band is the start. Here is the rest of the kit.
It combines genre-specific words using the six naming patterns that real bands follow, then shows you which pattern each result uses. Lock a word and every name is built around it, so the results feel personal rather than random.
Yes, the names are yours to use. Before you commit to one for releases or merch, search it on streaming platforms and social media to make sure a bigger act is not already using it and the handle is free to claim.
Short, easy to say, and evocative. It should create a feeling before anyone hears a note, work on a poster and a phone screen alike, and leave room for your sound to grow. The patterns above are a reliable starting point.
It does not have to. What matters is that the mood fits. A dreamy indie act leans poetic, a metal band leans intense. You can break the rules, but do it on purpose, not by accident.
Completely free, no signup. Everything runs in your browser. Generate as many as you like and tap any name to copy it.