AI Deep House Intros in Ableton Live — Filtered, Hypnotic, Ready to Mix
Deep House intros need to do two jobs: hook the listener in eight bars and give DJs room to mix. That means starting with a filtered element — shuffled hi-hats, a Rhodes stab, or a subby bassline — then building tension through filter sweeps, reverb tails, and sidechain pump. At 120 BPM in A minor, you're balancing warmth with movement.
How do producers make Deep House intros in Ableton manually?
Manually, this means drawing MIDI for hats with swing, programming a bassline that sits under the kick, layering Wavetable pads with automation on the filter cutoff, and timing every element so the drop at bar 17 feels earned. It's easy to overload the intro or leave it too sparse. VIXSUFFOUND generates Deep House intros inside Ableton Live. You describe the vibe — "filtered Rhodes chords in Dm with shuffled closed hats and a rising bassline" — and
How does VIXSOUND generate Deep House intros?
VIXSOUND returns editable MIDI across multiple tracks, loads Wavetable for pads, Operator for bass, and Drum Rack for the hats. The intro builds in energy without stepping on the kick. You get MIDI clips you can quantize, shift, or revoice. The output is yours — no royalties, no sample clearance. You're not waiting for a render or hoping the AI guessed your key. You're opening the clip, tweaking the velocity on the hat rolls, automating the low-pass on the bass, and adding your own vocal chop in Simpler. VIXSOUND handles the arrangement scaffolding so you can focus on the mix and the soul.
At a glance
| Genre | Deep House |
| Typical BPM | 118–124 |
| Common keys | Am, Cm, Dm, Em, Gm |
| Vibe | Warm, hypnotic, soulful |
| Drums | Four-on-the-floor with shuffled hats, deep kick |
| Bass | Subby filtered bass with movement |
How VIXSOUND generates Deep House intros
Setup
Open VIXSOUND inside Ableton and type your intro prompt: key, BPM, instruments, and mood. VIXSOUND generates MIDI for each element — shuffled hi-hats in Drum Rack, a filtered bassline in Operator, Maj7 chords in Wavetable. Each part lands on its own track with the instrument already loaded. The intro is structured in 8- or 16-bar phrases with filter and volume automation suggestions you can apply or ignore.
What VIXSOUND generates
You edit the MIDI directly in the clip view. Adjust the hat swing in the Groove Pool, shift the bassline up an octave, or change the chord voicing from Cmaj7 to Cm9. VIXSOUND's output is standard Ableton MIDI — no proprietary format. Add your own effects: Glue Compressor on the drum bus, Auto Filter with envelope follower on the bass, plate reverb on the pads.
Edit and arrange
Sidechain the bass and pads to the kick using Ableton's Compressor in sidechain mode. Render the intro as a stem or keep building into the drop. The workflow is the same as working with a collaborator who handed you a solid sketch — you're refining, not starting from scratch.
Try it free for 7 daysCopy-paste prompts
Paste any of these into the VIXSOUND chat inside Ableton Live to get started fast.
Frequently asked questions
How does VIXSOUND generate Deep House intros in Ableton?
Can I edit the intro after VIXSOUND generates it?
Does VIXSOUND understand Deep House tempo and groove?
Do I need music theory knowledge to use VIXSOUND for intros?
Who owns the intro VIXSOUND generates?
How much does VIXSOUND cost?
Stop reading. Start producing.
Open Ableton Live, type what you want, and let VIXSOUND handle the MIDI, sounds, stems, and arrangement.