VibeSing for
VibeSing for Friend Groups — Make AI Songs Together
How friend groups use VibeSing's Band Mode to make AI cover songs together — even when they're not in the same room.
What Band Mode is
Band Mode is VibeSing's group feature. Up to four people join a session, each clones their own voice, and the app generates a multi-voice cover where everyone's AI voice sings a part. You assign who takes the verse, who takes the chorus, who takes the bridge. The output sounds like a real group performance — harmonies, call-and-response, the works.
The thing that makes Band Mode different from just "AI singing a song" is that the result feels collective. It's not one person's project that other people react to. It's everyone's voice, layered together, into something nobody could have made alone.
How async group covers work
Nobody has to be online at the same time. Here's the actual flow:
- One person starts the session — creates a Band Mode invite link and drops it in the group chat
- Each person clones their voice on their own time — takes 30 seconds, done in their own room
- One person assigns parts — picks who sings verse, chorus, bridge, harmonies
- Generate — Band Mode combines all the cloned voices into one track
- Group review — share it back to the chat, get feedback, regenerate if needed
The whole thing can happen over a weekend even if your group is spread across time zones. The friend in Tokyo clones their voice Saturday morning. The friend in New York does it Saturday night. The coordinator assembles it Sunday.
Best moments to make group covers
Some group covers land harder than others. The best ones are tied to a specific shared moment:
- After a trip — you all just got back from somewhere. Pick a song that played on the drive. Generate a cover of it. Send it to the group chat the next morning. People will be emotional.
- A birthday — instead of signing a card, generate a group cover of the birthday person's favorite song. Each friend takes a line.
- The end of something — graduation, a job change, a move. Pick a song that marks the transition. Make it a group project.
- A reunion — haven't seen each other in years? Make a cover together before you meet up. Then perform the original song at the reunion.
- Group chat inside jokes — there's always that one song the chat won't shut up about. Cover it. Forever.
Sharing in group chats vs. posting publicly
Both work. Different audiences, different vibes.
Group chats are for the inside stuff. The cover that references a trip nobody else went on. The one with the bridge that says a friend's name. The one where the verse singer has clearly been told to sound like a specific person. Group chat shares are intimate and stay intimate.
Public posts are for the more universal stuff. The song choice that everyone already knows. The cover where the harmonies actually slap. Public posts have a different audience: your broader friend group, your followers, maybe a fandom if it's a cover of a known song.
VibeSing gives you both options — a private share link you can drop in any chat, and a public share page that looks like a clean album card. The same generation can serve both purposes.
Inside joke cover strategies
The covers that get shared the most in group chats are the ones that weaponize inside jokes. A few formats that work:
- The verse each person actually sang — assign parts based on what each friend would actually pick if they were singing. The friend who's always belting the chorus gets the chorus. The friend who whispers along to verses gets the verse.
- The wrong song on purpose — pick the song that sounds nothing like what the group usually listens to, but means something specific to one shared memory. The dissonance is the joke.
- The genre flip — take a hardcore punk song and assign each person to sing in the style they normally listen to. The country friend's verse. The metal friend's bridge. The result is unhinged and beautiful.
- The time capsule — make a cover every year of the same song. Compare them in December. The voice clones change, the song stays the same, the group's evolution is in the audio.
The best group covers become references. Years later, somebody sends the link again and everyone loses it.
Open the studio, start a Band Mode session, and send the invite link to your group chat.