Google Rebrands ProducerAI as Google Flow Music with New AI Features

Google has officially renamed its AI-powered music creation tool, ProducerAI, to Google Flow Music, integrating it into the broader Google Flow ecosystem that already includes tools for video and image generation. The rebranding, announced in April 2026, comes just months after the tool’s initial launch and introduces new remix capabilities designed to give users greater control over their musical creations.

The change reflects Google’s strategy to unify its experimental AI tools under a cohesive brand, positioning Flow Music as a creative collaborator for musicians and producers. According to company statements, the updated platform now supports features like “replace” and “extend,” allowing users to modify specific sections of a track using natural language prompts—for example, extending a lo-fi piano intro into a dubstep drop or generating multiple variations of a guitar solo to find the ideal take.

Google Flow Music remains powered by Gemini and Lyria 3, the latter of which has been updated to support the generation of full-length songs up to three minutes in duration, complete with structured intros, verses, and choruses. The tool as well includes a “Spaces” feature that enables collaboration by letting users share custom instruments and modular audio patches, fostering a community-driven approach to sound design.

All tracks created with Google Flow Music are watermarked with SynthID, Google’s technology for identifying AI-generated content, ensuring transparency about the origin of the music. This aligns with broader industry efforts to address concerns about AI attribution and copyright in generative media.

The platform is accessible through flowmusic.app, where users can begin creating music immediately with no credit card required. Google describes the service as free to start, offering daily credits to encourage experimentation and ongoing engagement.

By rebranding ProducerAI as Google Flow Music and enhancing its functionality, Google aims to lower the barrier to entry for music production while maintaining a focus on artistic control and ethical AI use. The tool represents part of the company’s ongoing exploration into how generative models can support creative workflows across audio, video, and design.

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