🎵 Song Names

A great song name is the first hook — it pulls listeners in before a single note plays.

30 Names 4 Styles Free
Top Picks
In Between Tides Turn Golden Hour Open Windows Hollow Sun Velvet Static Paper Hearts Chasing Trains
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Energy
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Showing 30 names
Hollow Suncreative
Paper Heartsfun
Golden Hourmodern
Velvet Staticcreative
Ghost Signalcreative
Open Windowsmodern
Almost Homemodern
Wild Quietcreative
In Betweenprofessional
Chasing Trainsfun
Radio Wavesmodern
Bright Ruincreative
Midnight Wirecreative
Tides Turnprofessional
Falling Forwardmodern
Signal Firecreative
Glass Bonescreative
Landslide Seasoncreative
Bitter Goldcreative
Echoes Onlymodern
Soft Collisionmodern
Northern Lightsprofessional
Burn Slowcreative
The Unravelingcreative
Smoke & Starscreative
The Last Roomcreative
Before the Darkcreative
Rust & Raincreative
Salt & Lightprofessional
The Long Wayprofessional

Famous Song Names That Nailed It

Real-world names that became iconic. Here's what makes them work.

Bohemian Rhapsody Queen, UK

A title that perfectly captures the song's operatic grandeur and defiant, free-spirited energy — impossible to forget.

Purple Rain Prince, USA

A two-word title of extraordinary emotional density — romantic, tragic, and visually stunning all at once.

Yesterday The Beatles, UK

Perhaps the most perfectly simple song title ever written, conjuring instant nostalgia and longing in a single word.

A song's name is its first impression on the world. Before listeners hear a single chord, the title sets expectations, stirs curiosity, and signals what emotional territory the music will explore. The best song names are impossible to forget. Some of the greatest song titles in history succeed through radical simplicity — 'Yesterday,' 'Purple Rain,' 'Thriller.' Others win through vivid specificity — 'Hotel California,' 'Bohemian Rhapsody,' 'Blowin' in the Wind.' Both approaches work because they create a world in just a few words. When naming your song, think about what image, feeling, or moment the music captures. Then find the most precise and evocative words to name that feeling. Avoid generic titles whenever possible — the more specific your name, the more universal its emotional appeal.

Tips for Choosing Song Names

1

Pull your title directly from the most powerful line in your lyrics — it already resonates.

2

One to four words is the sweet spot for most song titles; longer titles risk being forgettable.

3

Abstract emotional words (longing, static, rust, golden) often make more evocative titles than literal descriptions.

4

Read your title aloud — does it have good rhythm and sound? Great titles feel like poetry on their own.

5

Search streaming platforms before settling on a name; highly common titles make your song harder to find.

Frequently Asked Questions

Start by identifying the core emotion or image of your song, then find the most precise and evocative words to name that feeling. Look for standout phrases already in your lyrics.

Not necessarily, but having your title appear in the hook or chorus makes the song much easier for listeners to search for and share.

Yes — song titles generally cannot be copyrighted, so sharing a title with another song is legally fine, though it can make your track harder to discover online.

Memorable titles combine strong imagery, emotional resonance, and good sonic rhythm. A title that paints a picture or names a feeling precisely tends to stick.

Either works. Some artists find a title first as a creative anchor; others let the song fully form and extract the best title phrase from within the finished lyrics.

How to Name Your Song

Mine your own lyrics

Read through your finished (or draft) lyrics and highlight the most striking phrase. More often than not, the perfect title is already hiding in the song waiting to be noticed.

Find the emotional core

What is the song really about? Not the story, but the feeling. Naming that feeling precisely — even with an unexpected word — often produces the most powerful titles.

Experiment with contrast

Pairing two opposite or unexpected words creates intrigue — 'Violent Delights,' 'Quiet Storm,' 'Beautiful Lies.' Contrast makes a title impossible to ignore.

Check discoverability

Search your prospective title on Spotify, Apple Music, and YouTube. If 200 songs share your title, consider a more distinctive variation that still captures the spirit.

Let it breathe before you commit

Sleep on your top three title options. The one you're still excited about in the morning is usually the right one. First instincts are often correct, but rest confirms them.

Curious about what names mean? Explore Name Meanings →