I was wondering about this. I guess ro really get all the nuanced if a voice, it must have a good source to draw from. Ud say really good mic is needed too.

recording quality matters significantly when training a voice profile or persona in Suno.While you do not need expensive, professional studio gear, the AI's ability to accurately capture your tone and avoid robotic distortion depends heavily on clean audio.Keep these guidelines in mind when preparing your vocal uploads:1.

The Ideal Recording EnvironmentClean & Quiet: Record in a quiet space without background noise, wind, or room reverb. A quiet room using a basic smartphone mic is usually more than enough.Single Voice: Make sure your sample contains only one voice without overlapping background singers, harmonies, or instrumental tracks.No Effects:

Avoid uploading audio that already has heavy auto-tune, reverb, delay, or compression baked into it.2. What to Say or SingVaried Delivery: Try to sing or speak in multiple different pitches—sing some parts higher and some parts lower. This helps Suno understand the full range of your vocal capabilities.Adequate Length: Accuracy improves with training data.

The platform recommends submitting longer vocal samples (between 15 seconds up to 4 minutes).3. Suno's Processing RulesFormat: Suno prefers acapella tracks, but it can accept files that have background music because it uses built-in stem-splitting to automatically isolate your voice.4. Direct Audio Replacement vs. AI Voice ResemblanceThe "AI Voice" Limitation: [Suno] is designed to generate a voice that resembles your tone, rather than placing your exact, raw human vocal take onto the final track.Human Vocal Preservation:

If you want your exact recorded voice to be the final version on the song, you must record your own vocals in a digital audio workstation (DAW) and overlay them onto the generated Suno instrumentals.

Last edited by Fdemetrio; 1 hour ago.