Tell us what is happening in the scene, how the music should feel, and anything it should avoid. Use HOM3R for a fast self-serve starting point, or request a curated shortlist if you want us to do the deeper pull.
Best when you want a fast starting point. Describe the scene in plain language and let HOM3R point you toward matching music.
Best when the brief is specific, the stakes are higher, or you want a tighter shortlist from the OMR catalog.
Start simple. A few clear details about tone, pacing, and restraint usually produce better music matches than over-explaining the plot.
Looking for subtle tension under dialogue. Slow build, restrained, minimal instrumentation, no heavy hits, no obvious horror cues.
Need something reflective and emotional, but restrained. Piano-led or lightly atmospheric, intimate, dialogue-safe, not overly sentimental.
Need immediate momentum. Driving rhythm, forward motion, confident energy, strong pacing, but still editorially clean.
Looking for mood and texture more than melodic statement. Spacious, cinematic, immersive, and useful for building environment.
Looking for the moment after. Reflective, warm, emotionally settled, and built for aftermath, acceptance, or quiet release.
Need something close, fragile, and internal. Minimal, reflective, dialogue-safe music that feels inside the character rather than around the scene.
Looking for something unresolved and reflective. Feels suspended in thought, where nothing is fully clear and meaning is still taking shape.
Looking for a moment of clarity or understanding. Reflective, warm, and emotionally revealing without tipping into climax or full release.
You do not need a perfect brief. Even a few of these details will help narrow the search.
What is the scene doing? Building tension, revealing emotion, shifting power, moving the pace forward.
Quiet, tense, reflective, atmospheric, confident, uneasy, intimate, restrained, or driving.
Slow build, steady pulse, immediate lift, held-back tension, or something that stays under dialogue.
Too sentimental, too loud, too trailer-like, obvious drops, heavy percussion, vocals, or anything too busy.
Use HOM3R to translate your scene into music discovery. Start with a rough description, a tone reference, or a pacing problem.
Built for editors, producers, and music supervisors who need music that supports the scene, respects dialogue, and reduces search time.