FEATURE · AI MUSIC IN-EDITOR
Generate AI music inside your video editor
Mubert Fuse generates a track scored to your clip's length, mood, and BPM. Then auto-ducks it under voice and bakes everything into a 1080p MP4. The music lands in your timeline, not in a separate tool.
Music as part of the edit, not a separate file
Standalone music generators give you an audio file. Then you still need to download it, import it into a video editor, trim it, fade it, align it with the cut, and lower it under speech.
Fuse puts music generation inside the video project. Your clip duration becomes an input. The generated track lands on the timeline already matched to the edit, ready to mix with voiceover, original audio, SFX, and subtitles.
Looking for standalone music generation?
Use Mubert Render when the music itself is the deliverable: a standalone track, loop, jingle, mix, or piece of background music you want to download and use elsewhere.
Use Fuse when the music is part of a video workflow: matched to a clip, mixed under voice, combined with subtitles or SFX, and exported as a finished MP4.
Presets built for video timing
- Looped Video — seamless background for hooks, B-roll, or visual loops.
- Voiceover BG — lower-energy music designed to sit under speech.
- Advertising — punchy, direct, built for 15–30 second edits.
- Educational — neutral background for explainers and tutorials.
- Funny / Meme — playful and percussive for punchlines or edits.
- Epic — bigger build and payoff for reveals or highlights.
- Dramatic — slower tension for story, contrast, or suspense.
- Sport — high-energy rhythm for movement-heavy clips.
Works with the rest of the audio timeline
- Auto-duck — music dips under voice automatically.
- Multi-lane timeline — control music, voice, SFX, and original audio separately.
- AI voiceover — add narration and keep the music balanced underneath.
- Subtitles — generate captions after voice or speech is in place.
Questions, answered.
FAQ
Where does Fuse's music come from?
Fuse uses Mubert's generative music engine inside the video editor. The difference is the workflow: instead of creating a standalone track first, Fuse generates music for the current video project and places it directly on the timeline.
Is Fuse's music royalty-free?
Fuse generates original music and includes a commercial-use license on paid plans. This gives creators a clearer licensing path than using random downloaded tracks or platform-specific music libraries. Always check your plan terms for your specific use case.
How is 'music sized to your clip' different from a music generator?
A standalone music generator usually gives you a track of a preset length. Fuse uses your video duration as the target. If your clip is 17.4 seconds, the generated music can match 17.4 seconds instead of forcing you to trim, loop, or fade a longer track manually.
Can I customize the generated music?
Yes. Choose a preset, set or match the duration, and generate a track. If the first result does not fit, regenerate with the same settings or try a different preset.
I just want to generate music, not edit a video — where do I go?
Use Mubert Render for standalone music generation. Use Fuse when the music needs to be part of a video project with voice, subtitles, SFX, or export.
Generate music where the edit happens.
Upload a clip, create music to match its length, and keep the whole audio pass inside one timeline.
Start editing — it's freeLast updated
Your next short is one tab away
100 credits every month, one free project, no card. Score your first clip in the browser — it takes less than the music hunt.
Your next short is one tab away.
100 credits every month, one free project, no card. Score your first clip in the browser — it takes less than the music hunt.