Make Music Online

Discover How to Make Music for Video Online
There are great benefits to adding music to your video, it creates mood, tone, atmosphere and suspense…in a nutshell, it brings the vocals and visuals in your video to life!

Making music is not always an easy thing… that’s why we created tunepresto… an online music maker that makes music for you. All you have to do is upload your video, choose a musical style, and click compose.

You can upload your video from YouTube or from your PC.

The musical styles that we have available right now are: ensemble, atmospheric, minimalist one, minimalist two, percussion, electronic, urban. You can click here to read a rough guide to the various muscial styles available right now…

Have fun composing!

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Tunepresto online demo is now live

We’ve recently launched a demo version of Tunepresto.com. In this demo you get to choose a sample video, then choose a music style and … hey presto… you get music fitted to the video!

So, why do I need to put music to my video?
Picture this… You shot a memorable video and edited it down to the perfect size. You want your friends to look at it and enjoy it. You want to catch their attention and keep them engaged… nothing does this better than music!

Why can’t I just use my favourite tune to make music…?
Well… chances are that your favourite band or song is copyright music. This means if you publish it on the internet on a site like YouTube, your video could get removed for infringing copyright laws.

So tell me again, what does Tunepresto do?
Tunepresto makes original, copyright-free music in the style of your choice, perfectly fitted to your video. You can use the music on your website, on video sharing sites like YouTube, on social networking sites like facebook, in video advertisements… wherever you like!!

We hope you enjoy our service!

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Cheerleader

“I had fun with the percussion style and this slow mo footage”
Cathy Maxwell, videographer

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How to Make a Mojito

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Movie Scene: The Chase

Michael Parker, a staff member at the prestigious New York University, has been editing film and video for well over a decade. During his career, he has worn all hats; writing, directing, producing, editing and visual effects except for one; sound editing.

In his action packed short film featuring a handsome thief, a bar room fight, and a climactic car chase, Parker relies heavily on Abaltat Muse to create drama, anticipation and the crescendo.

The workflow was simple. Parker took his car chase video scene, which was edited in Apple Final Cut Pro, and exported to QuickTime. He then opened the QuickTime file in Muse and set the controls to automatically analyze the video tracks and output royalty free music with a specific beat. In less than 10 keyframes, Parker had created his first composition ever and the film’s final soundtrack.

Check out an excerpt from Michael’s movie.

Below are a few on set shots of the making of Up The Creek.

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What did they put in this guy’s coffee?

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Slideshow of Beach Scenes

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Revahealth Instructions Video

Instruction videos need music to punctuate what can be an otherwise monotone piece. We decided to try Tunepresto’s composition software to create a bit of background music. We had trawled music libraries but the whole process was very time consuming and didn’t really give us what we wanted. Using this software was much simpler and gave us what we needed.
Philip Boyle, WhatClinic.com

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Our Vacation in 1000 Islands by Steve Medwin

My wife Michele and I spent a week camping and boating in 1000 Islands (in the St Lawrence Seaway between New York and Ontario, Canada) during the summer of 2009. The weather wasn’t very good, but we had a great time. This video captures some of the sights and sounds of our vacation.

I composed and arranged the audio track using Tunepresto’s software, Abaltat Muse. This was mixed with still photos and video clips using Final Cut Express.
Steve Medwin

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International Space Station

A time-lapse clip framed by the frozen Lake Michigan shoreline. A lone enthusiast waits for the visit. Clip ends with a
pan to the west to see setting Venus. View in higher quality by clicking the link under the ‘sound’ button.
Music created with Abaltat and GarageBand.
400+ stills recorded with a Nikon D300 through a Sigma 10-20mm f4 lens.

More of Ken’s work can be seen at http://www.kenscottphotography.com

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