You can ship a publishable music video in under an hour with no camera, no location, no actors, and no budget. Six working approaches in 2026 — AI music video generator, stock footage compilation, lyric video only, AI-generated animation, public-domain archival footage, and beat-reactive visualizer. Each picks a different trade-off between speed, cost, and creative control.
Yes — six working approaches in 2026, all of which produce publishable music videos with zero camera time. AI generators, stock compilation, lyric videos, AI animation, public-domain archival footage, and beat-reactive visualizers.
For TikTok, Reels, and Shorts? No — lyric videos and AI-generated music videos actually outperform shot-on-camera band footage for indie artists by ~2:1 on completion rate. For YouTube long-form, a real performance video still wins.
Yes, on paid plans of any major tool. Solmi Pro, Kaiber Pro, Runway commercial tiers all grant commercial licensing for monetized YouTube, Spotify Canvas, TikTok monetization. Avoid generating videos of identifiable real people without consent.
Yes — on paid plans. YouTube allows monetization where the audio is licensed and visuals don't infringe third-party rights. Solmi Pro, Kaiber Pro, etc. include commercial licensing.
No for Solmi AI, pure lyric video, and visualizer methods. Basic editing skills for stock and archival compilations. More for manual AI animation pipelines.
Pexels and Pixabay both have large libraries with permissive licenses (free for commercial use, no attribution required). Internet Archive and Prelinger Archives have huge public-domain video libraries. Always read the specific license per clip.
For TikTok/Reels/Shorts: 15–60 seconds. For YouTube long-form: match the song length (typically 2–4 minutes). Match the platform's natural format.