Your track spends thirty seconds winding a spring, and the video has to release it at the exact same moment. Tell the chat where your builds and drops sit and the edit compresses toward each one — cuts shortening, frame tightening — then detonates into festival wides, strobing tunnels, or whatever world your sound lives in.
You describe intro, build, drop, and breakdown, and the cut rate and camera energy follow that map — tension into release, twice or ten times over.
Mainstage crowds, laser ceilings, CO2 bursts at the drop — the show your track belongs to, generated at a size no camera crew captures cheaply.
Not every EDM video is a crowd. Liquid chrome landscapes, infinite neon corridors, gravity-optional cities — describe the trip and it's built.
A DJ figure or recurring character, approved from portraits, threads through the chaos so your project has a face fans remember.
Dreamz is also a Claude connector (MCP) — describe your film to Claude and the finished video comes back in the conversation. If Claude is already your workspace, your film studio now lives there too.
Tell Dreamz about the edm music video you want — story, mood, who's in it. The director agent writes the script and casts characters with you, in chat.
Scenes generate live on your dashboard — visuals, voices, music and editing handled for you, with the exact price quoted before anything is charged.
Watch the finished cut, request changes in plain words, then download it — everything you make is commercially yours.
You tell the chat your track's timing — where the build starts, where the drop lands — and the video is cut to that structure, so the biggest visual moment arrives with the biggest audio one when you pair it with your master.
Quoted exactly in chat before any charge, with short videos starting at a few dollars. A teaser for the pre-save and a full video are quoted separately, and each approved quote is the exact bill.
Yes — pure sensory pieces are a natural fit for electronic music. Describe textures, colors, and motion rather than characters, and the film becomes the trip itself.
The finished video is commercially yours, so you're welcome to cut loops from it for VJ software or stage screens — many producers make a dedicated visuals piece for exactly that.
House, techno, dubstep, trance, DnB — the visual language shifts with what you name. Techno gets industrial austerity; trance gets vast skies and light. The subgenre is a direction, not a limitation.
Yes. Dreamz ships an official Claude connector (MCP): connect it once in Claude, then describe the video you want in any conversation — pricing quotes, drafts and the finished film are delivered right in the chat. The website and the Claude connector share the same account and pricing.
Map your track in chat and get visuals that release with it.