A long-distance song that crosses the distance instantly.
Cards take a week. Flowers wilt. Letters get lost. A Porizo long-distance song gift travels at the speed of a text message — original lyrics about the specific distance you two are managing, in the music style you choose, opened in any browser. Finished in about three minutes.
Three Time Zones
"Three time zones / and you still wake up earlier to text me / and I still stay up later to answer / and somehow the math of us still works."
The gift built for the relationship that lives on a phone.
Long-distance relationships and friendships make gifts harder. You can't show up at the door. Shipping takes a week. Cards arrive late. A Porizo song gift solves the format problem — it ships in minutes as a web link that plays in any browser, no install, no account required to listen. And the lyric is built around the specific distance: the time zone, the missed dinners, the running joke about who calls first. Performed by an AI vocalist in a music style you choose, so when they play the song at their desk they hear a song built entirely around the two of you. The personalized-song marketplaces (Songfinch, Songlorious, Songheart, ForeverSong) use human composers and take days at around $200; Porizo turns one real detail into a finished song in minutes for about $9.
Long-distance moments that earn their own song.
- A long-distance anniversary. Different cities, same date. A song that lands on both phones at once.
- A long-distance birthday. When you can't be there for the candles.
- Military deployment or international assignment. Months apart. A song that holds the distance.
- A long-distance Mother's Day or Father's Day. The parent in a different country who answers the phone surprised.
- A friend who moved away. The decade of friendship that became a series of texts. A song that names what stayed.
- Study abroad / a semester away. A song from family or partner that travels with them.
From three time zones to one shared song.
"Three time zones away you eat dinner when I eat breakfast / and we have learned the math of saying goodnight in the morning / and you have not let me forget once / what your laugh sounds like at 6am your time."
The lyric came from one detail: 'We FaceTime when she's eating dinner and I'm eating breakfast.' Porizo built a verse around the time-zone math and a chorus about the way distance changes the rituals — performed in the acoustic style the gifter chose.
Long-distance song gift questions.
How do I get the song to them across the world?
Send a web link by text, email, WhatsApp, or any messaging app. The song plays in any browser on any device. No app install required for the recipient.
How do I choose how the song sounds?
You pick the music style — acoustic, pop, R&B, folk — and an AI vocalist performs the lyrics built from your memory. For a long-distance gift, the specific detail is the part that lands hardest.
What if my time zone is twelve hours ahead?
Doesn't matter. The link works at any time. They can open it when they wake up and you can be asleep. The song waits.
Can I include specific details about where we live?
Yes. Mention the cities, the time difference, the way you do video calls, anything specific. The lyric weaves those details in.
What if the recipient's internet is slow?
The song is a short audio file (45–90 seconds). It loads fast even on a phone connection. The link also includes a low-bandwidth fallback.
Can multiple people contribute to the same song for someone long-distance?
Yes. Common pattern: one family member makes the song and includes everyone's name in the lyric. Or each family member makes their own version from their own memory.
Read more: Love song for boyfriend · Love song for girlfriend · Long-distance song gift ideas