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AI music video generator: turn a song into visual scenes

Turn a song into an AI music video with beat mapping, visual anchors, shot prompts, lip-sync choices, rights checks, and an OmniArt image-video-audio workflow.

OmniArt Team
AI music video generator: turn a song into visual scenes

An AI music video generator does not need to visualize every lyric. The strongest workflow finds the song’s structure, assigns a visual rule to each section, and generates short scenes that cut together on musical changes. OmniArt keeps the image, video, voice, and music tools in one workspace, so the process can begin with an owned song or with a track generated in the audio workspace.

Start with rights and structure

Use music you created, licensed, or have permission to publish. Mark the intro, verse, chorus, bridge, instrumental break, and outro. Then note the musical events that should trigger an edit: first downbeat, vocal entrance, drum fill, drop, key change, and final resolve.

Peringatan

A generated video does not clear music rights. Confirm the rights to the recording, composition, lyrics, voice, and any depicted likeness before release.

Choose one visual system

Write three anchors before generating:

  • Character or subject: the recurring face, object, or silhouette.
  • World: palette, location family, texture, and era.
  • Motion rule: how the camera and subject move with the music.

Example: one performer in a plum coat, empty city locations at blue hour, slow camera moves in verses, handheld movement in choruses, locked frames in the bridge.

Map sections to shots

Song sectionVisual job
IntroEstablish the world and visual motif
VerseShow detail, restraint, and narrative clues
ChorusIncrease scale, motion, and cutting speed
BridgeBreak the established rule for contrast
Final chorusReturn to the motif at maximum energy
OutroResolve on one memorable image

Generate clips longer than the edit needs so you can choose clean handles around each cut.

Build references before video

Create an approved character portrait, wardrobe still, key location, and hero frame in OmniArt’s image workspace. These references reduce visual drift across clips. Use the same anchors in every model and prompt.

For performance-led scenes, decide whether visible singing is necessary. Lip-sync raises the precision requirement. Many music videos work better with profile shots, movement, dance, objects, and atmosphere while the vocal remains on the soundtrack.

Pick models by shot

  • V6: low-cost drafts, reference images, audio experiments, multi-shot ideas.
  • Seedance: scenes with several visual or motion references.
  • Kling O3: physical performance and cinematic movement.
  • Sora 2: compact narrative or atmospheric concepts.
  • Veo 3.1: higher-resolution finishing options.
  • Grok Imagine 1.5: animating an approved hero still.

Tips

Cut on changes in energy, not every beat. A strong eight-second shot can carry a quiet verse; the chorus may need several shorter clips.

A practical workflow

  1. Import or generate the song in OmniArt’s audio workspace.
  2. Mark sections and edit points.
  3. Create the visual anchors as still images.
  4. Draft one verse shot and one chorus shot at the final aspect ratio.
  5. Approve the visual language before generating the full shot list.
  6. Cut to the master audio outside the generation step.
  7. Add titles and lyrics in the editor, not as generated scene text.
  8. Review continuity, rights, flashes, and platform-safe margins.

Getting started on OmniArt

Choose one chorus, create three visual anchors, and generate two contrasting clips in the video workspace. For original music, compare the best AI music models on OmniArt. A complete music video begins with one visual rule the audience can recognize when it returns.

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