Best for
Artists, producers, labels, and AI-song creators who already have a finished track and need a visual draft.
Upload the track, map the song structure, generate visual scenes for each section, and shape the result into a music-video draft for YouTube, Shorts, TikTok, or Reels.

This page explains the product workflow without claiming a public same-song demo. Playable examples will be added only after rights-cleared music and generated output assets are approved.
Artists, producers, labels, and AI-song creators who already have a finished track and need a visual draft.
A finished MP3, WAV, AAC, or M4A song file. Final timing matters because the visual plan follows the audio.
A reviewable AI music-video draft with planned sections, generated shots, and 16:9 or 9:16 export workflows.
Render a short section first. Full-song work should wait until the visual direction and section logic are clear.
Workflow
Start from the actual song structure, then shape each section into performance, story, atmosphere, or social cutdown material. Short tests help lock the direction before you render more of the track.
Use the final or near-final mix so the section timing, vocal entries, drops, and outro are stable.
Separate the song into moments that need performance, story, atmosphere, or social cutdown material.
Create normal AI scenes for visual storytelling and optional lip-sync shots where vocals should be visible.
Check pacing, section fit, repeated ideas, and whether the strongest lyric or drop gets enough visual weight.
Use landscape for YouTube-style releases or vertical for Shorts, TikTok, Reels, and teaser clips.
Use cases
Move from final audio to a visual draft without hiring a crew or starting in a timeline editor.
Give Suno, Udio, or other AI-song outputs a publishable visual direction instead of leaving them as audio-only posts.
Generate short vertical sections from the hook, drop, or best lyric before committing to a full version.
Create a coherent visual starting point for independent releases where a filmed video is not realistic.
Planning details
Confirm the input file, target channel, aspect ratio, and music rights before you commit to a longer render. The best first test is usually the hook, chorus, drop, or strongest lyric section.
FAQ
It means using a finished song as the input for a video workflow. VibeMV focuses on music-video drafts: section planning, AI scenes, optional lip-sync shots, and export formats for release channels.
No. A visualizer usually reacts to audio with waveform or spectrum graphics. VibeMV is for music-video scenes and assembled drafts, with optional lip sync for vocal moments.
Yes, as long as you have the rights needed to use and distribute that song. VibeMV can help create visuals, but it does not clear music rights for you.
Start with a short section. A small test helps validate style, pacing, and credit use before rendering a longer music-video draft.
Yes. Plan the strongest hook, chorus, or drop as a vertical section when the target channel is TikTok, Reels, or Shorts.
VibeMV supports common finished-song formats including MP3, WAV, AAC, and M4A.
Next reads
Use the main product page for the complete audio-to-MV workflow.
Add vocal performance shots where the song needs a visible singer or rapper.
Read the supporting tutorial and workflow explanation.
Use the free visualizer when you only need a lightweight audio-reactive clip.
Upload a high-value moment, review the first result, then expand once the pacing and style match the release.