How Singuit Works
A virtual guitarist in your pocket. Here's how to go from zero to singing along in under a minute.
Type a song name or artist into the search bar. Singuit's catalog covers thousands of popular songs across genres — and the library grows continuously with community requests.
Pick a song and Singuit instantly generates the chord progression using a real-time guitar strumming engine. You hear an actual guitar sound — not a MIDI beep — playing the right chords in the right order.
Adjust the BPM to slow things right down while you learn the melody, then speed up as your confidence builds. Loop any section. Singuit stays in sync with you — not the other way around.
Paste in the lyrics from any source and they scroll alongside the chords as the song plays. Lyrics are processed only in your browser and are never stored on our servers — your source is your business.
The Compose tool lets you build a custom chord chart for any song. Pick chords from the full palette, assign them row by row, write in your lyrics as a guide, and save your arrangement. Your compositions are private and available any time you sign in.
Apply a pre-built rhythm pattern (P1–P8 and more) or tap out your own beat in the Rhythm Editor. Assign down-strokes, up-strokes, and arpeggios to each hit, then save it as a reusable pattern across any song.
Sign in with Google to save your songs, compositions, and custom rhythms. Pick up exactly where you left off on any device.
🎤 For Singers
You don't need to play an instrument. Singuit acts as your virtual accompanist so you can focus entirely on your voice, phrasing, and pitch — without needing a bandmate or a backing track.
🎸 For Guitarists
Quickly preview chord charts, experiment with alternate voicings, and dial in the strum pattern before your next practice session or open mic.
🎵 For Beginners
Slow everything right down, follow along with the chord names on screen, and build muscle memory at your own pace. No music theory required to get started.
🎼 For Composers
Map out a new song's chord progression, experiment with different rhythms, and hear how it sounds — all before picking up a real instrument.
Ready to sing your favorite song?
Search the Song Library