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Google's Lyria 3 Pro: generates music up to 3 minutes and opens new opportunities for Ukrainian creators

Google announced Lyria 3 Pro — a model that generates structured tracks lasting up to three minutes. It’s a tool for podcasters, developers and media — but also a challenge for copyright rules. We break down where the model is available, how content protection works, and why this matters specifically for Ukraine.

Tetiana Suchkova-Ladik

By Tetiana Suchkova-Ladik

March 26, 2026 · 2 min read

Google's Lyria 3 Pro: generates music up to 3 minutes and opens new opportunities for Ukrainian creators
Ілюстративне фото: Depositphotos

What was announced and why it matters

Google introduced an updated music-generation model, Lyria 3 Pro, capable of creating compositions of up to three minutes while accounting for structure — intro, verses, choruses and other elements. For Ukrainian creators this means fast and controlled generation of soundtracks for podcasts, educational videos, indie games and social media content, saving production time and budget.

Where and how the model is available

Lyria 3 Pro is already being integrated into several Google products: it is available in Vertex AI in preview for businesses, has appeared in Google AI Studio, and is accessible via API for developers. Music-generation features were added to the Google Vids app; deployment is rolling out to Google Workspace customers and AI Pro/Ultra subscribers. In Gemini the new version allows generating up to three-minute compositions for blogs, podcasts and educational materials. ProducerAI was also updated — the platform received Lyria 3 Pro support and became available globally.

Copyright and authenticity protection

Google emphasizes that the model was developed with copyright in mind: according to the company, Lyria 3 Pro does not copy specific artists, and generated content receives a digital marking, SynthID, which allows tracking the origin of audio. This is an important step to reduce legal risks and to counter claims of directly reproducing someone else’s work.

"We developed Lyria 3 Pro with attention to rights holders and transparency: the model is not intended to copy specific artists, and generated tracks contain SynthID digital marking."

— Google AI team, official blog

Practical implications for Ukraine

For Ukrainian media and creators, Lyria 3 Pro is not only a cost-saving tool. First, it enables quick localization of sound for educational projects and information campaigns. Second, indie studios and game developers gain options for rapid music prototyping for budget projects. Third, amid intensified information resistance, controlled generative sound can become a tool for producing higher-quality content to convey messages without deploying large resources.

Risks and what to monitor

Despite SynthID, questions remain about the accuracy of the tagging, potential errors in copyright protection, and the ethical use of generative audio in information campaigns. Analysts at The Verge and TechCrunch note that such models speed up workflows but increase the need for transparent licensing and content-moderation policies.

Conclusion — what to expect next

Lyria 3 Pro is another step in the commercialization of audio generation: it makes professional music more accessible, but at the same time pushes the market to clarify the rules. For Ukrainian creators this is a chance to improve content quality at lower cost; for regulators it is a signal to rapidly update approaches to copyright and content identification. It is now important that the rollout be accompanied by transparent rules and SynthID verification, as well as open tests in real-world scenarios.

Context: In February 2026 Google released the Lyria 3 model integrated into Gemini; at the same time Chrome received the Gemini-based Nano Banana image generator — Google’s lineup of creative tools is expanding.

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May 26, 2026