Upload Your Track
Drop in an MP3 or WAV file. Any song, instrumental, or podcast track works.
Select a preset for your video
Default
Preset 7 of 109 · webbed · 200 bars · CircleWavePipeline
How It Works
No editing software, no manual keyframing, just upload and tune the look.
Drop in an MP3 or WAV file. Any song, instrumental, or podcast track works.
The AI listens to your song's rhythm, energy, and structure, not just the volume, so the visuals move with the music instead of bouncing to loudness.
Choose a visual style, preview it against your audio, and export in the aspect ratio you need.
Why It Is Different
Most free visualizer tools either stamp a watermark on your export or lock real features behind a paywall. MusVideo does not. Every video you export, free or paid, is yours to post.
A lot of visualizers just react to volume, so the visuals pulse the same way for a quiet verse and a loud drop. MusVideo reads rhythm, energy, and structure across the track.
Pick the aspect ratio your platform needs: vertical for TikTok and Reels, square for feed posts, widescreen for YouTube, then export without cropping afterward.
Style Library
Start with one of four visualizer engines, then tune ratio, colors, motion, title, and artist name.
Classic equalizer-style bars that pulse with the beat.
Smooth, flowing waveforms for a more ambient feel.
Circular patterns that expand and contract with energy.
Scattered motion that reacts to rhythm and texture.
An audio visualizer is a video generated from a song or audio file, where the visuals move in sync with the music's rhythm and energy. It is commonly used for releasing tracks on YouTube, TikTok, and Spotify Canvas without filming a traditional music video.
Yes. New accounts get free credits to generate a visualizer before paying for anything. You can try it with your own track and see the result before deciding to upgrade.
No. Exports never carry a watermark, whether you are on the free plan or a paid plan.
You can export in the aspect ratio that fits your platform: vertical for TikTok and Reels, square for feed posts, and widescreen for YouTube.
The AI analyzes the rhythm, energy, and structure of your track, rather than just its volume. That is why the visuals respond to what is actually happening in the music.