Gorky Park — Suno AI prompt
A ready 60-90-word style descriptor for the Style field in Suno v5.5. Era, instruments, production, vocal anchor — no name used, Suno's filter lets it through.
Gorky Park — known at home as Park Gorkogo — were the Soviet hard rock band that broke through to Western audiences at the very end of the Cold War. Formed in Moscow in 1987 and taken under the wing of Bon Jovi and Motley Crue manager Doc McGhee, they became the first Soviet rock act marketed seriously in the United States, memorably appearing at the 1989 Moscow Music Peace Festival alongside the biggest names in metal. The original lineup paired the soaring high-register voice of Nikolai Noskov with guitarist Alexei Belov, dressing polished American glam-metal in flashes of balalaika and Russian folk melody. Singing in English for the Western market, they broke onto MTV with "Bang", then reached even wider fame with the anthem "Moscow Calling" and the ballad "Try to Find Me". For creators, Gorky Park is a distinctive reference for late-80s glam and arena metal with an unmistakable East-meets-West twist: big layered guitars, stadium-sized gang-vocal choruses, gritty powerhouse lead vocals and a swaggering hard-rock drive coloured by Slavic melody — ideal for anthemic, larger-than-life rock productions.