Chrome Music Lab: 14 Free Tools to Make Music, Learn Math & Code in 5 Minutes 

What Is Chrome Music Lab? 

Chrome Music Lab is a free website from Google that makes learning music more accessible through fun, hands-on experiments. There are 14 interactive tools to create songs, explore rhythm, visualize sound waves, and connect music to math, science, and art. It works in Chrome on phones, tablets, and laptops. No account needed.

Launched for Music in Our Schools Month on Mar 9, 2016, it’s built with the Web Audio API, a freely-accessible, open web standard. Google also provides open-source code so anyone can build new experiments.

Why Chrome Music Lab Ranks #1 for Teachers & Parents in 2026

  1. Zero Friction: No downloads, no login, no personal details. Students open the site and start creating immediately.
  2. Cross-Platform: Works on Chromebooks, iPads, Android, Mac, PC. Ideal for BYOD and 1:1 classrooms.
  3. STEAM Bridge: Music ties into math through fractions, exponents, multiples, and prime factorization. Connects to science via sound waves and frequencies.
  4. Instant Share: Song Maker generates a unique link. Paste in Google Classroom, Teams, or digital portfolios.
  5. Age Range: Perfect for Grades 2–9, but teachers adapt it for younger or older learners.

All 14 Chrome Music Lab Experiments Explained + Best Uses

ExperimentWhat It DoesBest ForSTEAM Link
1. Song MakerGrid to make/share songs. Add melody + beat. Mic input.Composition, loopsMath: fractions, patterns
2. RhythmEasy beatmaking loop. Change percussionK-5 beat basicsMath: multiples, counting
3. SpectrogramPicture of sound showing frequenciesVisualizing voice, instrumentsScience: frequency, Hz
4. ChordsTap piano key > major/minor chordMusic theory basicsMath: intervals, ratios
5. Sound WavesBlue dots bounce as sound travelsSeeing soundScience: waves, vibration
6. ArpeggiosTap wheel to play chord notes 1-by-1Guitar/piano patternsMath: sequences
7. KandinskyDraw anything > turns into soundAbstract art + musicArt: Kandinsky, synesthesia
8. Melody MakerGrid: left-right = time, up-down = pitchSimple melodiesMath: graphing X/Y
9. Voice SpinnerRecord voice. Spin slow/fast, forward/backPitch & tempoScience: playback speed
10. HarmonicsMathematical frequencies, natural intervalsAdvanced theoryMath: overtone series
11. Piano RollNotes flow like pianola. Change soundsReading musicHistory: player piano
12. Oscillators4 types show changing vibrations/frequenciesSound synthesisScience: sine/square waves
13. StringsExperiment: string length vs pitchPhysics of instrumentsScience: tension, length
14. Shared PianoPlay piano with friend on same device or webCollaborationSocial-emotional learning

Access All: https://musiclab.chromeexperiments.com/Experiments

How to Use Song Maker: 5-Minute Tutorial

Song Maker is the most popular tool. It lets you make and share songs without signing up.

Quick How-To:

  1. Open Song Maker: musiclab.chromeexperiments.com/Song-Maker
  2. Add Notes: Click grid squares. Rows = pitch, columns = time.
  3. Add Beats: Click dots at bottom for drums.
  4. Change Instruments: Piano, synth, strings, woodwind, marimba.
  5. Adjust Settings: Length, scale, tempo, beats per bar.
  6. Save & Share: Click “Save” > copy unique link. Paste in Google Classroom.

Pro Tip: Use the mic option at bottom right to sing notes in. Chrome converts pitch to grid notes automatically.

50+ Classroom Lesson Ideas by Grade

Grades 2-3: Rhythm & Patterns

  • Rhythm: Create 4-beat patterns. Count “1-2-3-4” while tapping.
  • Kandinsky: Draw shapes. Guess if sound will be high/low based on drawing height.

Grades 4-6: Fractions & Sound Waves

  • Sound Waves: Compare high vs low notes. Which dots move faster?
  • Melody Maker: Write 8-note melody. Identify skips vs steps.

Grades 7-9: Chords & Data

  • Chords: Build major vs minor. Graph “happy vs sad” survey.
  • Spectrogram: Record “eeee” vs “oooo”. Compare frequency pictures.
  • Shared Piano: Compose in pairs over web. Discuss collaboration.

STEAM Project: Use Spectrogram to visualize your voice, Oscillators to graph sine waves in math, then compose in Song Maker.

Chrome Music Lab vs Other Tools

ToolCostLogin?Best ForLimit
Chrome Music LabFreeNoQuick experiments, K-9Not full DAW
IncrediboxFree/PaidNoBeatbox loopsLimited melody
SoundtrapFree/PaidYesFull recording, collabLearning curve
Flat.ioFree/PaidYesNotation, sheetsNot visual/playful

Chrome Music Lab wins for “5-minute start, zero friction”.

For Developers: Build Your Own Experiment

Chrome Music Lab is open-source. The experiments use Web Audio API, WebRTC, WebMIDI, Tone.js.

GitHub: github.com/googlecreativelab/chrome-music-lab
Consult the README in each experiment folder for build instructions. Collaborators include @tambien, @ericrosenbaum, @alexanderchen.

Use it as inspiration to create your own music projects on the web.

FAQs: Chrome Music Lab 2026

1. Do students need an account to use Chrome Music Lab?
No. Chrome Music Lab requires no login, passwords, or personal details. Students open the site in a browser and start experimenting immediately.

2. Can Chrome Music Lab be used on iPads or tablets?
Yes, Chrome Music Lab runs smoothly on most modern browsers, including Safari and Chrome on iPads or Android tablets. Just make sure the device is updated and connected to the internet.

3. What age group is Chrome Music Lab best for?
It’s perfect for students in Grades 2–9, but teachers adapt it for younger or older learners. The colourful, intuitive design makes it accessible to beginners, while advanced students explore composition and sound design.

4. How can I save or share student work from Song Maker?
After finishing, click “Save” or “Share” to generate a unique link. Copy into Google Classroom, email, or digital portfolio. No files download – the project lives online.

5. Does Chrome Music Lab work without internet?
No. It’s web-based and needs connection. For offline, try downloading recordings via screen record.

6. Is there a Chrome Music Lab app?
No official app. Use musiclab.chromeexperiments.com in Chrome or Safari. Beware of fake apps.

Why Kids & Adults Stay for 12+ Minutes

PCWorld said it best: “It’s like a Web-based Exploratorium for sound.” Each experiment has enough depth to explore variations. You start with one dot in Rhythm and 10 minutes later you’re layering arpeggios in Song Maker.

Start Playing Now: Your 3-Step Challenge

  1. Open Song Maker: 60 seconds to make a 4-bar loop
  2. Try Spectrogram: Record your name. Can you see the vowels?
  3. Share: Send your Song Maker link to a friend. Try Shared Piano together

Crank up the volume and start playing at g.co/musiclab.

Sources: Google Blog, GitHub, Tech & Learning, SA Dept for Education, Midnight Music, PCWorld, Skoove

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