Google's Gemini app adds AI music generation with Lyria 3

Google has integrated its Lyria 3 AI model into the Gemini app, enabling users to create 30-second music tracks from simple prompts. The feature, which also generates lyrics and album art, is rolling out today with safeguards like watermarking to identify AI content. It expands Gemini's capabilities beyond text, images, and video.

Google announced on February 18, 2026, that its Gemini app now incorporates the Lyria 3 model, allowing users to generate short music clips. With a prompt like "a comical R&B slow jam about a sock finding their match," Gemini produces 30-second tracks, including automatically generated lyrics, without requiring users to provide them. The model also supports remixing existing tracks and creating music from photos or videos, while offering control over elements such as tempo and drumming style.

Lyria 3 builds on previous versions by producing more realistic and musically complex outputs. Each generation includes album art created by Google's Nano Banana image model. The feature extends to YouTube's Dream Track for generating backing tracks in Shorts, pairing with AI video tools like Veo.

Google provides example prompts and resulting tracks, such as "Sweet Like Plantain," a fun afrobeat track about childhood memories of home-cooked plantains, and "Sea Shanty," an a cappella piece with male choir vocals, foot-stomps, and handclaps simulating a ship's deck. Other examples include a Motown parody with orchestral R&B elements and a wistful pop track with breathy vocals and rainy city vibes.

To address concerns over AI music, tracks are watermarked with SynthID, an audio identifier detectable via Gemini, similar to tools for images and videos introduced at Google I/O 2025. Google states that naming a specific artist in prompts provides broad inspiration rather than direct imitation, though it acknowledges limitations and encourages reporting of issues. The model respects copyright and partner agreements.

Availability begins today in the Gemini web interface for users aged 18 and older, supporting English, Spanish, German, French, Hindi, Japanese, Korean, and Portuguese. Mobile app rollout follows in a few days, with higher usage limits for AI Pro and AI Ultra subscribers. More languages are planned soon.

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Illustration of a smartphone screen featuring Google's AI Overviews upgraded to Gemini 3 with conversational chat interface.
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Google upgrades AI overviews to Gemini 3 model

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Google has announced upgrades to its AI Overviews in Search, now powered by the Gemini 3 model as the default. The update allows users to ask follow-up questions through a chat interface that leads into AI Mode conversations. This rollout aims to make searches more conversational and accurate globally on mobile devices.

Google is overhauling its Workspace apps by integrating deeper Gemini AI capabilities to assist in document creation and editing. The updates allow Gemini to pull context from emails, files, and other sources to generate drafts and refine content. These features aim to streamline workflows for users across Docs, Sheets, Slides, and Drive.

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Google has released Gemini 3.1 Pro, an updated version of its flagship AI model, emphasizing improvements in problem-solving and reasoning. The model is available in preview for developers and consumers starting today. It builds on the Gemini 3 release from November.

Google is introducing a new Gemini AI feature in Google Calendar to simplify scheduling by suggesting optimal meeting times based on participants' availability. The tool also allows easy rescheduling if conflicts arise. It is rolling out to eligible paid Workspace users.

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Google has begun rolling out a new 'Skills' feature in its Chrome browser on desktop, enabling users to save and quickly reuse custom Gemini AI prompts. The update makes it easier to repeat tasks like calculating protein in recipes or comparing products across tabs. Skills sync across devices when signed into a Google account and include a library of premade prompts.

At the Game Developers Conference 2026 in San Francisco, generative AI tools drew mixed reactions, with demos from Google highlighting potential uses amid widespread developer skepticism. A recent industry report showed 52% of companies using the technology, but only 36% of workers incorporating it into their jobs, and 52% viewing it as harmful to the sector.

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