Just their first name — so the song can feel like it's about them.
A graduation song marks a specific moment in someone's arc — the end of one chapter and the start of another. It works for the new graduate themselves (high school, college, master's, PhD, professional certifications) and for the people who carried them there: parents giving it to a kid, a partner who watched them through finals, a friend who knew them before they had a direction.
In the description, the strongest detail is the journey — what they were like before, what they pushed through, what they want to do next. "She switched majors three times and almost gave up in year two" lands harder than the field they graduated in. The song becomes a record of who they were at this moment, not a generic well-done.
This is also one of the better occasions for a video upgrade — graduates often share the song on social channels with the photo, and a 9:16 vertical format fits Instagram and TikTok cleanly. The two-minute generation also means you can make it the morning of the ceremony.
What they studied, where they're going next, and one thing you're proud of. Specific beats generic — the AI runs with anything concrete (a hard-won A, the late-night project they pulled off, the field they're entering). Sentimental is fine; so is funny.
Yes. Every order generates a free 30-second preview. If you love it, pay 49 SEK and download the full MP3 (plus a video if you added a photo). If it's not right, discard it and start over — no charge.
Yes — the share link is private and works on phones. Tell the graduate to check it after the ceremony, or play the video on a friend's phone when the moment hits.
Yes. Write the 'about them' field in the language you want the song to be in — Swedish, English, anything. The AI follows your input language.
A personalised song fits any moment that matters.
A song that captures the year — their personality, a shared memory, the in-jokes only you two know.
Romantic, nostalgic, or playful — choose the vibe and we'll write the love letter as a song.
A first dance no one else has heard, or a wedding-gift song for the couple from a friend.
For best-friend anniversaries, long-distance friends, or a thank-you to someone who has been there.
A gift song for a teacher, mentor, colleague — saying it in music lands differently than in words.