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Capabilities / AI Conversation

Natural Language Interface

Communicate with Wubble using natural, flexible language that matches your creative process

Overview

Wubble's Natural Language Interface eliminates the barrier between creative vision and technical execution. You don't need to learn specialized terminology, memorize parameter ranges, or navigate complex interfaces. Simply describe what you want in your own words—whether creative, technical, or a mix of both—and Wubble understands and acts on your intent.

The system is trained on millions of audio production conversations, industry terminology, creative descriptions, and real-world workflows. It recognizes professional jargon, understands colloquial expressions, and interprets contextual clues to deliver exactly what you need.

Unified Multi-Modal Generation

One of the most powerful features of Wubble's natural language interface is the ability to generate music, voice, and sound effects all at once with a single prompt. Simply describe your complete audio vision naturally, and Wubble will create all elements together, synchronized and mixed cohesively.

For example: "Create an upbeat electronic track with an enthusiastic tech presenter voice and futuristic UI sound effects for a product launch video" will generate all three elements in one go, with context maintained throughout.

Key Advantages

Unified generation: Create music, voice, and SFX all at once with a single prompt
No learning curve: Start creating immediately without studying documentation or learning syntax
Flexible communication: Use your own words, style, and level of technical detail
Context-aware: AI interprets meaning from context, not just literal words
Ambiguity handling: When unclear, AI asks clarifying questions rather than guessing
Multi-lingual support: Communicate in your preferred language

Communication Styles

Wubble adapts to different communication styles, from purely creative descriptions to highly technical specifications. Use whatever approach feels most natural for your workflow.

Creative Descriptive Style

Describe sounds, moods, feelings, and artistic intent. Perfect for ideation and creative exploration when you know what you want emotionally but not technically.

Creative Examplestext
✅ Good Examples (Creative Descriptions):
"Create an uplifting morning soundtrack with bright acoustic guitars"
"Make it sound like a summer road trip - carefree and energetic"
"I need something mysterious and cinematic, like a spy thriller"
"Generate a warm, cozy voiceover for a coffee shop commercial"
"Dark atmospheric techno with heavy bass, like Berlin underground"

✅ These work because:
• They convey mood and emotion clearly
• They provide contextual reference points
• They focus on the feeling, not just technical specs
• They're specific enough to guide creation

Technical Precise Style

Use industry terminology, specific parameters, and technical specifications. Ideal for experienced professionals who know exactly what they need.

Technical Examplestext
✅ Good Examples (Technical Language):
"128 BPM house track in Aminor with sidechain compression"
"Female vocal, neutral American accent, 30-35 age range, warm timbre"
"Ambient pad with low-pass filter at 800Hz, long reverb tail"
"Stem separation into drums, bass, melody, and vocals"
"Master to -14 LUFS with true peak limiting at -1dB"

✅ These work because:
• They use precise terminology correctly
• They specify measurable parameters
• They describe technical processing clearly
• They provide exact targets and constraints

Mixed Hybrid Style (Recommended)

Combine creative descriptions with technical details. This approach provides the most comprehensive direction and typically yields the best results.

Mixed Approach Exampletext
✅ Best Approach (Mixed Language):
"Create a chill lo-fi hip hop beat around 85 BPM. Warm analog sound 
with tape saturation. Dusty drum samples, jazz piano chords, and a 
smooth bassline. Make it perfect for studying - relaxed but not boring."

This combines:
• Technical specs (85 BPM, tape saturation)
• Creative description (chill, warm, dusty, smooth)
• Use case context (studying - relaxed but not boring)
• Sonic characteristics (analog sound, jazz elements)

What Works Well

Certain communication patterns consistently produce better results. Here's what Wubble understands particularly well:

Mood & Emotion

"Energetic," "melancholic," "tense," "uplifting," "nostalgic," "aggressive"

AI understands emotional descriptors and translates them into sonic characteristics

Reference Comparisons

"Like [artist/song] but more [characteristic]"

Referencing existing work provides clear creative direction

Use Case Context

"For a [specific purpose]" - commercial, game, podcast, film, etc.

Context helps AI optimize for the right format and style

Genre & Style

Musical genres, voice styles, sound design categories

Recognizes hundreds of genres and subgenres with their conventions

Sonic Characteristics

"Warm," "bright," "muddy," "crisp," "heavy," "airy"

Translates descriptive sound qualities into technical adjustments

Relative Adjustments

"Make it louder," "more reverb," "faster tempo"

Understands relative changes based on current state

Temporal Descriptions

"At 30 seconds add a build-up," "Fade out at the end"

Understands time-based instructions and arrangement

Problem Descriptions

"The vocals are too quiet," "Too much bass"

Identifies issues and suggests appropriate fixes

Common Pitfalls to Avoid

While Wubble is flexible, certain patterns can lead to confusion or suboptimal results. Here's what to avoid:

Patterns to Avoidtext
❌ Avoid These Patterns:

"Make it good" - Too vague, no direction
"Sound professional" - Unclear what professional means in context
"Like my previous project" - Without specifying which one
"Fix it" - Doesn't explain what's wrong
"More" - More what? More intense? Louder? Longer?
"That thing with the sound" - Need specific terminology
"You know what I mean" - AI needs explicit direction

Better alternatives:
"Make it more energetic with faster tempo and brighter mix"
"Sound professional - clear vocals, balanced mix, -14 LUFS"
"Like the track we made yesterday called 'Summer Vibes'"
"The vocals are too quiet - increase by 3dB and add presence"
"More intense - faster drums, heavier bass, add distortion"
"Increase the reverb on the vocal track"
"I want that tape delay effect we discussed earlier"

Excessive Vagueness

Terms like "good," "better," "professional," or "fix it" without context. Always specify what you mean by these subjective terms.

Assuming Shared Knowledge

Phrases like "you know what I mean" or referring to "that thing" without naming it. Be explicit about what you're referencing.

Contradictory Instructions

Requesting "loud but subtle" or "fast-paced and relaxing." If you need contrasting elements, specify where each applies.

Incomplete Comparisons

Saying "more" or "less" without specifying more/less than what, or "like before" without clarifying which previous state.

Multi-Language Support

Wubble supports natural language input in multiple languages, with the same level of understanding and contextual awareness across all supported languages.

Primary Support
  • • English
  • • Spanish
  • • French
  • • German
  • • Italian
  • • Portuguese
Extended Support
  • • Japanese
  • • Korean
  • • Mandarin Chinese
  • • Russian
  • • Arabic
  • • Hindi
Additional Languages
  • • Dutch
  • • Swedish
  • • Polish
  • • Turkish
  • • + 20 more

Language Mixing

You can mix languages in the same conversation, particularly useful for technical terms that are commonly used in English across the industry (e.g., "reverb," "BPM," "compression").

Best Practices

Start Broad, Then Refine

Begin with general creative direction, then add specifics through follow-up messages. This iterative approach often yields better results than trying to specify everything upfront.

Combine Description Types

Mix creative descriptions with technical specs when appropriate. "Warm lo-fi hip hop beat at 85 BPM with vinyl crackle" works better than either approach alone.

Provide Context

Always mention what you're creating and its purpose. Context helps AI make better decisions about format, style, and technical optimizations.

Use Examples

Reference existing songs, artists, or previous work. Comparative language provides clear creative direction that's easy for both humans and AI to understand.

Be Specific About Problems

When something isn't right, describe specifically what's wrong: "vocals are buried in the mix" is clearer than "vocals sound bad."

Don't Overthink It

The natural language interface is designed to understand casual communication. Write naturally as if explaining your idea to a collaborator.

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