How to visualize music online
- Drop in a track — or switch to the microphone to react to live sound.
- Pick a style (Bars, Mirror Bars, Waveform, Radial Rings, Particles, Spectrogram, Orbit or Tunnel) and a color theme.
- Hit play and watch the canvas move with the music; go fullscreen for a wall-sized show.
- Want a file? Start the video capture, play the track through, stop, and download the .webm with sound.
This music visualizer online gives every track a face: the analyser taps the frequency spectrum dozens of times per second and drives bars, particles, rings and tunnels in perfect sync with the beat. Musicians render visualizer videos for YouTube and Spotify Canvas-style promos, streamers run the fullscreen mode as a backdrop, and DJs plug in the mic input so the room drives the graphics. Eight styles times six palettes means a fresh look for every release — and since analysis, drawing and even video capture all happen in your browser, it is free, private and watermark-free.
FAQ
How do I make a music visualizer video for free?
Drop a track into the tool, pick a visual style and color theme, then use the export panel: press start, play the song, and stop when it ends. The capture runs in real time and you get a .webm video with the audio included — no watermark, no account.
What visual styles can I choose from?
Eight: Bars, Mirror Bars, Waveform, Radial Rings, Particles, Spectrogram, Orbit and Tunnel. Each can be combined with six color themes — Brand Red, Sunset, Ocean, Neon, Mono and Aurora — so one song can look completely different per render.
Can the visualizer react to my microphone or instrument?
Yes — switch to the microphone input and the graphics react to anything the mic hears: singing, a guitar amp, a DJ mix or the room itself. It makes a great live backdrop in fullscreen mode at parties, streams and performances.
Is my music uploaded when I use the visualizer?
No. The audio is analyzed locally with the Web Audio API and the visuals are drawn on a canvas in your browser. Even the video capture is recorded on your device, so nothing ever reaches a server.