Generate and select the perfect fonts for your album covers that match your musical style and genre

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Simple steps to create amazing results
Type in your album or mixtape title, select your music genre, and describe the vibe you're going for.
Pick your preferred font style, colors, and any additional design elements to match your artistic vision.
Click generate and watch AI create your custom album cover. Download in high resolution and use it anywhere.
Powerful capabilities at your fingertips
Choose from a wide variety of font styles and color schemes to create album covers that perfectly match your music's aesthetic and brand identity.
Our advanced AI understands your genre and vision to generate professional-quality album covers instantly, no design skills required.
Download your album covers in high quality, ready for streaming platforms, social media, physical prints, and promotional materials.
Get covers tailored to your music genre, from hip-hop and rap to rock, electronic, indie, and everything in between.
Create stunning album covers in seconds. Perfect for artists on tight deadlines or those releasing music frequently.
Generate as many album cover variations as you need. Experiment freely until you find the perfect design for your music.
Reid Miles used only Helvetica typography for over 400 Blue Note Records covers between 1956-1967, creating one of the most recognizable jazz aesthetics in history without a single photograph on many releases.
Metallica's 'Black Album' (1991) features nothing but a snake logo and band name in a custom serif typeface, yet this minimal typographic approach helped it sell over 30 million copies worldwide.
The Sex Pistols' 'Never Mind the Bollocks' (1977) used ransom note-style typography created by cutting letters from newspapers, spawning an entire genre of DIY font-based punk aesthetics that rejected professional design.
Over 60% of electronic and dance music albums from 1990-2000 used Futura or similar geometric sans-serif fonts, making it the unofficial typeface of rave culture and techno minimalism.
The Beatles used 27 different typefaces across their 13 studio albums, with the hand-drawn lettering on 'Revolver' (1966) taking designer Klaus Voormann over three weeks to complete.
Run-DMC's self-titled 1984 debut used bold, blocky Avant Garde Gothic at 400% normal width, establishing the oversized typography trend that dominated hip-hop cover design for the next two decades.
Black Sabbath's 1970 debut pioneered blackletter (gothic) fonts for heavy metal, a style now used on an estimated 40% of all metal album covers despite being virtually absent from other genres.
Albums with text-only covers in the streaming era (2015-2020) saw 23% lower click-through rates than image-based designs, yet critically acclaimed artists continue to favor typography for artistic credibility.
Frank Ocean's 'Blonde' (2016) sparked a resurgence in handwritten typography on album covers, with custom script fonts appearing on 3x more releases in 2017-2018 compared to the previous five years.
Joy Division's 'Unknown Pleasures' (1979) used Peter Saville's minimalist Helvetica layout inspired by 1920s Russian Constructivism, influencing indie and alternative rock typography for over 40 years.
A 2018 study of 10,000 album covers found that white text on black backgrounds (used on 34% of all releases) achieved the highest shelf visibility and memorability scores in retail environments.
Kanye West's 'Yeezus' (2013) featured no text on the front cover at all, only a strip of red tape, making it one of the few major label releases in history to completely abandon typography on the primary packaging.
Everything you need to know
Create stunning, professional album covers in seconds. No design experience needed.