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2026-06-07

Turn a finished song into an AI music video release teaser

A good AI music video does not paste random visuals onto a song; it turns the intro, hook, energy, and ending into scenes a viewer can follow.

The visual problem usually appears after the song starts working. The hook is strong, the rough master feels close, and then the first video draft looks like an unrelated mood board. There is a pretty close-up, a dramatic street, a slow camera move, and no clear reason any of it arrives when the chorus does. A release teaser needs an edit idea before it needs more generated images.

An AI music video generator can help you turn a finished track into visual material, but it still needs direction. Decide first whether you are making a performance clip, a simple visualizer, a 15-second hook teaser, or a vertical short for social platforms. Each format asks the viewer to notice something different: the singer, the beat, the lyric, the mood, or the release date.

kaivorMusic.AI is an AI music creation tool for creators and small teams that want to turn prompts into song or background music drafts they can hear, compare, and revise. When the track is ready for a visual pass, the AI Music Video Generator page is the relevant product entry point for building a song-linked video draft: https://kaivormusic.ai/ai-music-video-generator.

Lock the audio before you chase visuals. Mark the intro, first lyric, beat entrance, hook, break, and ending in a simple note. Beside each moment, write the job of the shot, not just the look. The hook might need one stable close-up. The break might need space and less motion. The ending might need a clean frame where a title, release date, or artist name can sit without fighting the image.

Write a six-part treatment before generation: format, performer or subject, setting, color palette, camera behavior, and exclusions. A useful prompt could be: vertical video for a quiet electronic pop song, one singer in night light, anonymous city backdrop, blue and silver palette, slow camera with no frantic cutting, no fake logos, no imitation of a real artist. If the song itself is still a sketch, draft the audio first with the AI Music Generator and build the video around the chosen version: https://kaivormusic.ai/ai-music-generator.

Three reusable ideas work immediately: make a 12 to 18 second hook teaser before attempting a full video; build one repeatable visualizer concept instead of ten unrelated scenes; and test the vertical crop on a phone with captions, title text, and an end card turned on. A square or horizontal cut is useful only if you have a real destination for it.

Common mistakes include changing the visual world on every line, covering sung lyrics with too much text, creating a performer who resembles a real person without permission, using reference images the team does not control, and assuming AI-generated video is automatically accepted everywhere. Before release, check tool terms, platform rules, and any synthetic-content disclosure requirements; keep records of prompts, source images, files, and approvals: https://kaivormusic.ai/tos.

FAQ: Should I start with the song or the video? Start with the song, or at least a fixed song structure. Do I need a full music video? Not always; a clean hook teaser may do more for a release than a weak three-minute clip. Can I use a real singer's face? Only with the right permissions and usage terms. Is vertical enough? Often for social teasers, but cover art, websites, and press kits may need other formats. The takeaway: make the picture follow the song's structure instead of competing with it.