I'm looking around for a free tool that allows you to make a song spectrum video, speifically the vertical bar kind. I'm looking to edit it in my video using Chroma Key. The bars also have to be one color.
Well, not sure about getting something "Free", but here's a link for doing a video using visual-audio spectrum analyzer(s). Good Luck! To me, sometimes you do have to pay for things, as not everything in life is free. From what this YouTuber does, as well as others I follow that do tutorials with HitFilm Pro or Express, I have found no issue doing the ones I need and incorporating either as a rendered out HitFilm video, or in Vegas Pro or Movie Studio Platinum (both ver. 15).
There are tons of free visualizers, from simple scatter plots to Milkdrop and beyond.
Any of them can be captured and overdubbed in post.
So the answer is yes there is, when you've designed it.
Please DO share your results here.
A simple request. Just a bar music visualiser whose colors can be changed.
And it's ^$#@&$ harder to find than a unicorn.
Has NOBODY thought of this before?
E: Sorry, I just spent the past hour looking for what I need. I even installed Winamp 5.8 just to check MilkDrop (which turned out to be useless for my purposes). Why? Why something as simple as this doesn't exist?
In the late 1990s, every Acid Jazz lounge and many discos used Milkdrop, which should be still available and had thousands of presets. If it's not suitable for your needs, it was a staple of my adult social experience.
There was a free programmable software module for radio stations (not a visualizer) with voiceover and editable playlists from NCH and I'll look for it also on an old drive.
I honestly wonder if you need to start scripting something for you own specific purpose. This stuff has been available for a couple of decades.
List of electronic music visualizers
Atari Video Music, designed by the initiator of the home version of Pong, Robert Brown, and introduced by Atari Inc. in 1976.
Pixelmusic 3000,[8] open source music visualizer on a microcontroller, made by Uncommon Projects in 2008.
List of music visualization software
OpenCubic Player, PC/DOS Module file player with real-time STFT based music visualization from 1994.
Psychedelia (1984, Jeff Minter), an early "light synthesizer", did not use audio input but was designed to create visualizations in accompaniment to music.
Virtual Light Machine (1990, Jeff Minter) (Platform: Atari Jaguar)
Cthugha (1993, Kevin "Zaph" Burfitt) (Platform: DOS)
Advanced Visualization Studio (Justin Frankel) (Platform: Windows)
MilkDrop (2001–2012, Ryan Geiss) reimplemented as projectM (Platforms: Windows, Linux, Android)
Music Animation Machine (1985–2013, Stephen Malinowski) visualizes MIDI, rather than waveforms.[9]
Neon (2004, Jeff Minter and Ivan Zorzin) (Platform: Xbox 360)
Visual Music Tone Painter (1992–2004, Stephen Nachmanovitch)[10]