Migrate from soundraw to suno.
1 documentation-derived translation pattern — what carries over and what to watch for. Cited to the Feature Parity Map; the audit tells you whether the move is worth it.
A team consolidating Soundraw into Suno moves royalty-free background-track creation into Suno's text-to-song flow. In Suno, describe the piece in natural language (genre, mood, theme, instrumentation, 'instrumental only' if vocals aren't wanted) instead of clicking Soundraw's mood/genre/length presets. Re-create Soundraw's bar-level edits with Suno's section regeneration / Remix and stem export. Use Suno's Pro or Premier plan to get commercial-use rights equivalent to Soundraw's licensed downloads, and prefer 'Instrumental' generations to match Soundraw's no-AI-vocals output.
- Warning: Licensing models differ materially: Soundraw is trained only on in-house music and grants a perpetual, copyright-claim-free license on every download (rights survive cancellation), whereas Suno's commercial rights attach only to songs made while on a paid Pro/Premier plan and Suno does not guarantee copyright protection — re-verify rights for any track that must be reused long-term.
- Warning: Suno generates full songs with vocals and lyrics from a single prompt by default (use its 'instrumental' option to match Soundraw's no-vocals output); matching Soundraw's instrument-by-instrument bar-level editing requires Suno's regenerate/extend and Song Editor tools or Suno Studio (Premier) rather than a like-for-like per-instrument mixer.