[Updated] 15 DIY Music Production Tutorial Videos for Home Studios
15 DIY Music Production Tutorial Videos for Home Studios
15 YouTube Video Ideas for Musicians
Richard Bennett
Oct 26, 2023• Proven solutions
If you’re a musician who wants the world to hear your music, getting your music on YouTube is a must! By uploading your work onto the world’s most popular video platform, you talent has the potential to reach millions of listeners. Here are fifteen YouTube video ideas you can use to share your music.
Polish Your YouTube Music Videos with Filmora
Filmora features plentiful video and audio editing tools, which allows you to cut out unwanted clips, remove the background noise , change the video and audio speed. The tutorial below shows you how to create a split-screen video with fun with the split-screen presets in Filmora.
1. Live Performance
Raw talent that is unedited and uncut can make a huge impact on your audience. In the above video, William Singe and Alex Aiono perform a live mashup from beginning to end without stopping. This kind of all-in-one-take performance is even more impressive when it is flawless. If you’ve got what it takes to perform your music from beginning to end without stopping, try recording yourself doing a live performance.
2. Cover A Classic Song
Although you might gain a lot of views in the short-run by covering a popular song that is currently in the top charts, you may find that your views will drop significantly in a few years when the song loses its relevance in pop culture. On the other hand, classic songs are timeless and performing them may even pleasantly evoke nostalgia to many listeners. In the video above, Daniela Andrade and HanByul Kang beautifully cover the 1934 jazz classic “Stars Fell on Alabama.” Do you have any favorite old classics?
3. Cover a Popular Song With Your Own Lyrics
As mentioned above, covering a popular song that is currently in the top charts can bring in a lot of views. But since many people do just straight covers of songs, you’ll find yourself competing for views against many other musicians if you do the same. Creatively rewriting the lyrics of the song you choose to cover is one way you can set your cover apart from all the others out there. In the above video, the performer creatively sings a cover of MAGIC!’s “Rude” from the perspective of the father in the song.
4. Cover a Popular Song In a Different Genre
Another way to set your cover apart from all the other many covers out there is to change up the genre. Whether or not everyone likes the genre you choose, it’s still undoubtedly interesting to hear a familiar song in such a different way. Postmodern Jukebox transforms a lot of current songs into old genres of music. Check out their jazzy version of Meghan Trainor’s “All About That Bass.”
5. Show Your Musical Adaptability Through Many Genres
Professional musicians mostly adhere to fewer genres of music so that they don’t leave their listeners confused about who they are as a musician. This, at times, can get quite predictable and boring. Switching between multiple genres can be refreshingly interesting, especially if it’s many genres in one video. Rapper Mac Lethal explores 27 styles of rap in the above video.
6. Cover a Popular Song With a Musical Instrument (Or With Several If You Know How To Play More Than One)
If you cover a popular song with a musical instrument, you not only have the potential to gain many views from people searching up your song, but you also have the potential to gain many views from people searching up your instrument. In the above video, Lily Liu performs “See You Again” on her Zither/Guzheng.
7. Play Your Musical Instrument In a Unique Way
In much of the same way that performing a familiar song in a different genre can be refreshingly interesting, playing a familiar musical instrument in a different way can have the same effect. The above video is a YouTube classic video featuring Greg Pattillo playing his flute while simultaneously beatboxing.
8. Cover a Popular Song Using Odd (Non-Musical) Objects
Since music is a combination of notes, you can practically create music out of anything that has a pitch, which is everything that makes a sound. With the power of editing and pitch manipulation, you can create fascinating instrumental covers like Andrew Huang’s 99 Red Balloons.
9. Transform Non-Melodic Speech Into Music
There’s a lot you can do with music creation when you have access to software pitch manipulation. One of those things you can do is transform non-melodic speech into music. In the above video, many different clips of Donald Trump have been edited together to recreate Camila Cabello’s hit song “Havana.”
10. Produce a Remix
Most of the ideas we mention in this list have to do with taking something already existing and transforming it into something new. Similarly, a remix is a transformative musical piece. But rather than performing your music in a different and interesting way, remixing involves producing digital music using music production software. In the above video, C2C remixes Stevie Wonder’s “Superstition.”
11. Produce a Mashup
Unlike a medley where you perform one song and then move onto the next in a sequential manner, in a mashup you blend parts and fragments of songs together in a non-sequential manner, oftentimes overlapping parts that belong to different songs (vocals from one song over the instrumental of another song). In order to do this in a way that ends up not sounding like a jumbled mess, you need to make sure all the parts you’re mixing together are not only in the same tempo, but also in the same key. My mashups have been shared all over the world.
12. Make An Acapella Arrangement
Most songs on the radio have all kinds of different sounds going on that it can be difficult to just appreciate and enjoy the sound of the human voice. Acapella arrangements, on the other hand, attempt to recreate music with just the voice. Your own voice is a musical instrument that you can use in so many different ways to make all kinds of unique sounds. Mike Tompkins is someone who has made his mark on YouTube as an acapella musician.
13. Impersonate Celebrities
If you’re a musician who also happens to be good at doing impersonations of celebrities, recording yourself performing a song in different voices that others are familiar with can be a huge hit. In the above video, Yanina Chiesa performs a medley of songs featuring 15 different celebrity singers.
14. Music Tutorial
YouTube is the go-to place for many people who want to learn how to do something, including music. In the above video, Anna-Maria Hefele explains how polyphonic overtone singing works.
15. Make A Song So Bad, It Just Might Go Viral
Making music that’s so bad that it goes viral is not as easy as you might think. When it comes to bad quality material, there’s probably more of those on YouTube than there is good quality material. Your music will have to be extra bad in order to stand out among the competition. Rebecca Black’s “Friday” is a notable example of this last YouTube video idea.
Richard Bennett
Richard Bennett is a writer and a lover of all things video.
Follow @Richard Bennett
Richard Bennett
Oct 26, 2023• Proven solutions
If you’re a musician who wants the world to hear your music, getting your music on YouTube is a must! By uploading your work onto the world’s most popular video platform, you talent has the potential to reach millions of listeners. Here are fifteen YouTube video ideas you can use to share your music.
Polish Your YouTube Music Videos with Filmora
Filmora features plentiful video and audio editing tools, which allows you to cut out unwanted clips, remove the background noise , change the video and audio speed. The tutorial below shows you how to create a split-screen video with fun with the split-screen presets in Filmora.
1. Live Performance
Raw talent that is unedited and uncut can make a huge impact on your audience. In the above video, William Singe and Alex Aiono perform a live mashup from beginning to end without stopping. This kind of all-in-one-take performance is even more impressive when it is flawless. If you’ve got what it takes to perform your music from beginning to end without stopping, try recording yourself doing a live performance.
2. Cover A Classic Song
Although you might gain a lot of views in the short-run by covering a popular song that is currently in the top charts, you may find that your views will drop significantly in a few years when the song loses its relevance in pop culture. On the other hand, classic songs are timeless and performing them may even pleasantly evoke nostalgia to many listeners. In the video above, Daniela Andrade and HanByul Kang beautifully cover the 1934 jazz classic “Stars Fell on Alabama.” Do you have any favorite old classics?
3. Cover a Popular Song With Your Own Lyrics
As mentioned above, covering a popular song that is currently in the top charts can bring in a lot of views. But since many people do just straight covers of songs, you’ll find yourself competing for views against many other musicians if you do the same. Creatively rewriting the lyrics of the song you choose to cover is one way you can set your cover apart from all the others out there. In the above video, the performer creatively sings a cover of MAGIC!’s “Rude” from the perspective of the father in the song.
4. Cover a Popular Song In a Different Genre
Another way to set your cover apart from all the other many covers out there is to change up the genre. Whether or not everyone likes the genre you choose, it’s still undoubtedly interesting to hear a familiar song in such a different way. Postmodern Jukebox transforms a lot of current songs into old genres of music. Check out their jazzy version of Meghan Trainor’s “All About That Bass.”
5. Show Your Musical Adaptability Through Many Genres
Professional musicians mostly adhere to fewer genres of music so that they don’t leave their listeners confused about who they are as a musician. This, at times, can get quite predictable and boring. Switching between multiple genres can be refreshingly interesting, especially if it’s many genres in one video. Rapper Mac Lethal explores 27 styles of rap in the above video.
6. Cover a Popular Song With a Musical Instrument (Or With Several If You Know How To Play More Than One)
If you cover a popular song with a musical instrument, you not only have the potential to gain many views from people searching up your song, but you also have the potential to gain many views from people searching up your instrument. In the above video, Lily Liu performs “See You Again” on her Zither/Guzheng.
7. Play Your Musical Instrument In a Unique Way
In much of the same way that performing a familiar song in a different genre can be refreshingly interesting, playing a familiar musical instrument in a different way can have the same effect. The above video is a YouTube classic video featuring Greg Pattillo playing his flute while simultaneously beatboxing.
8. Cover a Popular Song Using Odd (Non-Musical) Objects
Since music is a combination of notes, you can practically create music out of anything that has a pitch, which is everything that makes a sound. With the power of editing and pitch manipulation, you can create fascinating instrumental covers like Andrew Huang’s 99 Red Balloons.
9. Transform Non-Melodic Speech Into Music
There’s a lot you can do with music creation when you have access to software pitch manipulation. One of those things you can do is transform non-melodic speech into music. In the above video, many different clips of Donald Trump have been edited together to recreate Camila Cabello’s hit song “Havana.”
10. Produce a Remix
Most of the ideas we mention in this list have to do with taking something already existing and transforming it into something new. Similarly, a remix is a transformative musical piece. But rather than performing your music in a different and interesting way, remixing involves producing digital music using music production software. In the above video, C2C remixes Stevie Wonder’s “Superstition.”
11. Produce a Mashup
Unlike a medley where you perform one song and then move onto the next in a sequential manner, in a mashup you blend parts and fragments of songs together in a non-sequential manner, oftentimes overlapping parts that belong to different songs (vocals from one song over the instrumental of another song). In order to do this in a way that ends up not sounding like a jumbled mess, you need to make sure all the parts you’re mixing together are not only in the same tempo, but also in the same key. My mashups have been shared all over the world.
12. Make An Acapella Arrangement
Most songs on the radio have all kinds of different sounds going on that it can be difficult to just appreciate and enjoy the sound of the human voice. Acapella arrangements, on the other hand, attempt to recreate music with just the voice. Your own voice is a musical instrument that you can use in so many different ways to make all kinds of unique sounds. Mike Tompkins is someone who has made his mark on YouTube as an acapella musician.
13. Impersonate Celebrities
If you’re a musician who also happens to be good at doing impersonations of celebrities, recording yourself performing a song in different voices that others are familiar with can be a huge hit. In the above video, Yanina Chiesa performs a medley of songs featuring 15 different celebrity singers.
14. Music Tutorial
YouTube is the go-to place for many people who want to learn how to do something, including music. In the above video, Anna-Maria Hefele explains how polyphonic overtone singing works.
15. Make A Song So Bad, It Just Might Go Viral
Making music that’s so bad that it goes viral is not as easy as you might think. When it comes to bad quality material, there’s probably more of those on YouTube than there is good quality material. Your music will have to be extra bad in order to stand out among the competition. Rebecca Black’s “Friday” is a notable example of this last YouTube video idea.
Richard Bennett
Richard Bennett is a writer and a lover of all things video.
Follow @Richard Bennett
Richard Bennett
Oct 26, 2023• Proven solutions
If you’re a musician who wants the world to hear your music, getting your music on YouTube is a must! By uploading your work onto the world’s most popular video platform, you talent has the potential to reach millions of listeners. Here are fifteen YouTube video ideas you can use to share your music.
Polish Your YouTube Music Videos with Filmora
Filmora features plentiful video and audio editing tools, which allows you to cut out unwanted clips, remove the background noise , change the video and audio speed. The tutorial below shows you how to create a split-screen video with fun with the split-screen presets in Filmora.
1. Live Performance
Raw talent that is unedited and uncut can make a huge impact on your audience. In the above video, William Singe and Alex Aiono perform a live mashup from beginning to end without stopping. This kind of all-in-one-take performance is even more impressive when it is flawless. If you’ve got what it takes to perform your music from beginning to end without stopping, try recording yourself doing a live performance.
2. Cover A Classic Song
Although you might gain a lot of views in the short-run by covering a popular song that is currently in the top charts, you may find that your views will drop significantly in a few years when the song loses its relevance in pop culture. On the other hand, classic songs are timeless and performing them may even pleasantly evoke nostalgia to many listeners. In the video above, Daniela Andrade and HanByul Kang beautifully cover the 1934 jazz classic “Stars Fell on Alabama.” Do you have any favorite old classics?
3. Cover a Popular Song With Your Own Lyrics
As mentioned above, covering a popular song that is currently in the top charts can bring in a lot of views. But since many people do just straight covers of songs, you’ll find yourself competing for views against many other musicians if you do the same. Creatively rewriting the lyrics of the song you choose to cover is one way you can set your cover apart from all the others out there. In the above video, the performer creatively sings a cover of MAGIC!’s “Rude” from the perspective of the father in the song.
4. Cover a Popular Song In a Different Genre
Another way to set your cover apart from all the other many covers out there is to change up the genre. Whether or not everyone likes the genre you choose, it’s still undoubtedly interesting to hear a familiar song in such a different way. Postmodern Jukebox transforms a lot of current songs into old genres of music. Check out their jazzy version of Meghan Trainor’s “All About That Bass.”
5. Show Your Musical Adaptability Through Many Genres
Professional musicians mostly adhere to fewer genres of music so that they don’t leave their listeners confused about who they are as a musician. This, at times, can get quite predictable and boring. Switching between multiple genres can be refreshingly interesting, especially if it’s many genres in one video. Rapper Mac Lethal explores 27 styles of rap in the above video.
6. Cover a Popular Song With a Musical Instrument (Or With Several If You Know How To Play More Than One)
If you cover a popular song with a musical instrument, you not only have the potential to gain many views from people searching up your song, but you also have the potential to gain many views from people searching up your instrument. In the above video, Lily Liu performs “See You Again” on her Zither/Guzheng.
7. Play Your Musical Instrument In a Unique Way
In much of the same way that performing a familiar song in a different genre can be refreshingly interesting, playing a familiar musical instrument in a different way can have the same effect. The above video is a YouTube classic video featuring Greg Pattillo playing his flute while simultaneously beatboxing.
8. Cover a Popular Song Using Odd (Non-Musical) Objects
Since music is a combination of notes, you can practically create music out of anything that has a pitch, which is everything that makes a sound. With the power of editing and pitch manipulation, you can create fascinating instrumental covers like Andrew Huang’s 99 Red Balloons.
9. Transform Non-Melodic Speech Into Music
There’s a lot you can do with music creation when you have access to software pitch manipulation. One of those things you can do is transform non-melodic speech into music. In the above video, many different clips of Donald Trump have been edited together to recreate Camila Cabello’s hit song “Havana.”
10. Produce a Remix
Most of the ideas we mention in this list have to do with taking something already existing and transforming it into something new. Similarly, a remix is a transformative musical piece. But rather than performing your music in a different and interesting way, remixing involves producing digital music using music production software. In the above video, C2C remixes Stevie Wonder’s “Superstition.”
11. Produce a Mashup
Unlike a medley where you perform one song and then move onto the next in a sequential manner, in a mashup you blend parts and fragments of songs together in a non-sequential manner, oftentimes overlapping parts that belong to different songs (vocals from one song over the instrumental of another song). In order to do this in a way that ends up not sounding like a jumbled mess, you need to make sure all the parts you’re mixing together are not only in the same tempo, but also in the same key. My mashups have been shared all over the world.
12. Make An Acapella Arrangement
Most songs on the radio have all kinds of different sounds going on that it can be difficult to just appreciate and enjoy the sound of the human voice. Acapella arrangements, on the other hand, attempt to recreate music with just the voice. Your own voice is a musical instrument that you can use in so many different ways to make all kinds of unique sounds. Mike Tompkins is someone who has made his mark on YouTube as an acapella musician.
13. Impersonate Celebrities
If you’re a musician who also happens to be good at doing impersonations of celebrities, recording yourself performing a song in different voices that others are familiar with can be a huge hit. In the above video, Yanina Chiesa performs a medley of songs featuring 15 different celebrity singers.
14. Music Tutorial
YouTube is the go-to place for many people who want to learn how to do something, including music. In the above video, Anna-Maria Hefele explains how polyphonic overtone singing works.
15. Make A Song So Bad, It Just Might Go Viral
Making music that’s so bad that it goes viral is not as easy as you might think. When it comes to bad quality material, there’s probably more of those on YouTube than there is good quality material. Your music will have to be extra bad in order to stand out among the competition. Rebecca Black’s “Friday” is a notable example of this last YouTube video idea.
Richard Bennett
Richard Bennett is a writer and a lover of all things video.
Follow @Richard Bennett
Richard Bennett
Oct 26, 2023• Proven solutions
If you’re a musician who wants the world to hear your music, getting your music on YouTube is a must! By uploading your work onto the world’s most popular video platform, you talent has the potential to reach millions of listeners. Here are fifteen YouTube video ideas you can use to share your music.
Polish Your YouTube Music Videos with Filmora
Filmora features plentiful video and audio editing tools, which allows you to cut out unwanted clips, remove the background noise , change the video and audio speed. The tutorial below shows you how to create a split-screen video with fun with the split-screen presets in Filmora.
1. Live Performance
Raw talent that is unedited and uncut can make a huge impact on your audience. In the above video, William Singe and Alex Aiono perform a live mashup from beginning to end without stopping. This kind of all-in-one-take performance is even more impressive when it is flawless. If you’ve got what it takes to perform your music from beginning to end without stopping, try recording yourself doing a live performance.
2. Cover A Classic Song
Although you might gain a lot of views in the short-run by covering a popular song that is currently in the top charts, you may find that your views will drop significantly in a few years when the song loses its relevance in pop culture. On the other hand, classic songs are timeless and performing them may even pleasantly evoke nostalgia to many listeners. In the video above, Daniela Andrade and HanByul Kang beautifully cover the 1934 jazz classic “Stars Fell on Alabama.” Do you have any favorite old classics?
3. Cover a Popular Song With Your Own Lyrics
As mentioned above, covering a popular song that is currently in the top charts can bring in a lot of views. But since many people do just straight covers of songs, you’ll find yourself competing for views against many other musicians if you do the same. Creatively rewriting the lyrics of the song you choose to cover is one way you can set your cover apart from all the others out there. In the above video, the performer creatively sings a cover of MAGIC!’s “Rude” from the perspective of the father in the song.
4. Cover a Popular Song In a Different Genre
Another way to set your cover apart from all the other many covers out there is to change up the genre. Whether or not everyone likes the genre you choose, it’s still undoubtedly interesting to hear a familiar song in such a different way. Postmodern Jukebox transforms a lot of current songs into old genres of music. Check out their jazzy version of Meghan Trainor’s “All About That Bass.”
5. Show Your Musical Adaptability Through Many Genres
Professional musicians mostly adhere to fewer genres of music so that they don’t leave their listeners confused about who they are as a musician. This, at times, can get quite predictable and boring. Switching between multiple genres can be refreshingly interesting, especially if it’s many genres in one video. Rapper Mac Lethal explores 27 styles of rap in the above video.
6. Cover a Popular Song With a Musical Instrument (Or With Several If You Know How To Play More Than One)
If you cover a popular song with a musical instrument, you not only have the potential to gain many views from people searching up your song, but you also have the potential to gain many views from people searching up your instrument. In the above video, Lily Liu performs “See You Again” on her Zither/Guzheng.
7. Play Your Musical Instrument In a Unique Way
In much of the same way that performing a familiar song in a different genre can be refreshingly interesting, playing a familiar musical instrument in a different way can have the same effect. The above video is a YouTube classic video featuring Greg Pattillo playing his flute while simultaneously beatboxing.
8. Cover a Popular Song Using Odd (Non-Musical) Objects
Since music is a combination of notes, you can practically create music out of anything that has a pitch, which is everything that makes a sound. With the power of editing and pitch manipulation, you can create fascinating instrumental covers like Andrew Huang’s 99 Red Balloons.
9. Transform Non-Melodic Speech Into Music
There’s a lot you can do with music creation when you have access to software pitch manipulation. One of those things you can do is transform non-melodic speech into music. In the above video, many different clips of Donald Trump have been edited together to recreate Camila Cabello’s hit song “Havana.”
10. Produce a Remix
Most of the ideas we mention in this list have to do with taking something already existing and transforming it into something new. Similarly, a remix is a transformative musical piece. But rather than performing your music in a different and interesting way, remixing involves producing digital music using music production software. In the above video, C2C remixes Stevie Wonder’s “Superstition.”
11. Produce a Mashup
Unlike a medley where you perform one song and then move onto the next in a sequential manner, in a mashup you blend parts and fragments of songs together in a non-sequential manner, oftentimes overlapping parts that belong to different songs (vocals from one song over the instrumental of another song). In order to do this in a way that ends up not sounding like a jumbled mess, you need to make sure all the parts you’re mixing together are not only in the same tempo, but also in the same key. My mashups have been shared all over the world.
12. Make An Acapella Arrangement
Most songs on the radio have all kinds of different sounds going on that it can be difficult to just appreciate and enjoy the sound of the human voice. Acapella arrangements, on the other hand, attempt to recreate music with just the voice. Your own voice is a musical instrument that you can use in so many different ways to make all kinds of unique sounds. Mike Tompkins is someone who has made his mark on YouTube as an acapella musician.
13. Impersonate Celebrities
If you’re a musician who also happens to be good at doing impersonations of celebrities, recording yourself performing a song in different voices that others are familiar with can be a huge hit. In the above video, Yanina Chiesa performs a medley of songs featuring 15 different celebrity singers.
14. Music Tutorial
YouTube is the go-to place for many people who want to learn how to do something, including music. In the above video, Anna-Maria Hefele explains how polyphonic overtone singing works.
15. Make A Song So Bad, It Just Might Go Viral
Making music that’s so bad that it goes viral is not as easy as you might think. When it comes to bad quality material, there’s probably more of those on YouTube than there is good quality material. Your music will have to be extra bad in order to stand out among the competition. Rebecca Black’s “Friday” is a notable example of this last YouTube video idea.
Richard Bennett
Richard Bennett is a writer and a lover of all things video.
Follow @Richard Bennett
Direct Conversion of Spotify Music: 5 Tools for YouTube Streaming
Do you want to transfer your playlist to YouTube Music from Spotify? After all, there are some significant advantages to using the former over the latter. For one, YouTube Music offers a broader range of songs and videos without ads.
Though Spotify is a widely used music streaming app, its many limitations for non-Premium members have driven users to look for alternatives. For example, 30-second ads that play every 15 minutes and the inability to skip songs are among the app’s most frustrating features.
So, if you’re ready to convert Spotify playlists to YouTube Music, let’s get started!
Recommendation And Guidance For Using The Playlist Transfer Tools
With Spotify and YouTube Music, you can access millions of songs and playlists at the click of a button.
But what if you want to move your Spotify playlist to YouTube Music? Luckily, the following 5 best tools can help you to do just that.
Name | Price | Transfer amount limit | Speed | Compatibility |
---|---|---|---|---|
Playlist Buddy | Free | 250 songs per playlist. | 1 minute | YouTube and Spotify |
TuneMyMusic | Free | 1,000 tracks | 38 seconds. | Spotify, Itunes, Apple Music, Nanpster, YouTube, Deezer, Tidal, Google Play Music, and Amazon Music |
Soundiiz | Free | 200 tracks | 26 seconds. | Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube Music, TIDAL, and more |
Playlist Converter | Free | unlimited | Slow processing | YouTube Music, Spotify, PLS, Deezer |
SongShift | Free | Unlimited | 40 seconds | Spotify, YouTube Music, Apple Music, Deezer, Amazon Music, Discogs, and more |
Playlist Buddy
Playlist Buddy is a free-to-use online tool that is fully dedicated to converting your Spotify playlist to YouTube within a minute. The program is quick, easy, and simple- so there’s no excuse not to try it out!
Key Features
- Transfers playlists one-by-one
- Free to use
- Compatible with YouTube and Spotify
- Can convert your lists to a CSV file
Limitations
- Cannot be used for other music streaming services
- Limited to only 250 tracks per playlist
How To Use?
To transfer your Spotify Playlist to YouTube Music using the Playlist Buddy, do the following steps:
Step1 First, open a browser on your PC and visit the “Playlist Buddy” site. Click “Login to Spotify.”
Step2 Now, click “Agree” to provide access to your account information. Click the “Sign in YouTube” button and log in to your account.
Step3 Select your Spotify playlist, click “Convert Playlist,” and Playlist Buddy will start transferring your Spotify to YouTube playlist.
Tune My Music
Tune My Music is another free tool that offers 96% accuracy while converting your Spotify playlist to YouTube Music. With this platform, you can transfer up to 1000 tracks at a time in just a few seconds.
Key Features
- Intuitive interface and workflow
- Can transfer playlists in batches
- Transfers tracks in 38 seconds
- Synchronizes two playlists from two different music services
- Backups your songs
Limitations
- Does not transfer playlists/tracks in order
- No playlist descriptions
How To Use?
The following steps will help you use the TuneMyMusic platform to convert your Spotify playlist to YouTube Music:
Step1 Visit the Tune My Music website using your browser and click the “Let’s Start” option.
Step2 On the “Select The Source” page, choose “Spotify” as your source and sign in to your account.
Step3 Now, load your Spotify playlist or paste its URL from your account. Click “Next: Select Destination” on the next page and choose “YouTube Music” from the given options.
Finally, click “Start Moving My Music” to convert your Spotify playlist to YouTube Music.
Soundiiz
If you want to quickly and instantly convert your Spotify playlist to YouTube, Soundiiz is the right solution for you! This tool is free and compatible with multiple musics streaming services.
Key Features
- 98% accuracy while transferring songs
- Fast transfer of playlists between many platforms
- No app download is required
- Excellent UI
Limitations
- Transfers albums, artists, and liked songs only in the premium version
- Can only transfer 200 tracks
How To Use
Follow these steps to convert your Spotify playlist to YouTube music using Soundiiz:
Step1 In the first step, visit the Soundiiz website and click the “Start Now” option.
Step2 Select the “Sign in with Spotify” option from the list to log in to your account and click “Access” to provide permission to access your details.
Step3 Select “YouTube Music” from the left-side panel and click “Connect.” Now, sign in to your account.
Step4 Now, open the “Transfer” tab, choose “Spotify” as a source, and go to “Playlists.” Choose the Spotify playlist and click “Confirm and Continue.”
Step5 Configure your playlist and click the “Save Configuration” option. Next, click “Confirm” and choose “YouTube Music” on the next page to convert your Spotify to a YouTube playlist.
Playlist Converter
Playlist Converter allows you to take your favorite Spotify playlists and convert them to YouTube Music, Apple Music, Google Play Music, or Amazon Music.
This handy platform is easy-to-use and only takes a few minutes to convert your favorite playlists.
Key Features
- Converts to multiple music sources and file formats
- Available for free
- Unlimited transfers
- No registration is required
Limitations
- Not much accurate
- It takes time to process
How To Use?
To use the Playlist Converter tool for converting Spotify playlists to YouTube Music, follow these steps in sequence:
Step1 Visit the Playlist Converter website using your browser and go to the “Spotify” tab.
Step2 Click “Log in with Spotify” and sign in to your account. Make sure to provide access to your details.
Step3 Select your Spotify playlist and click “Export to YouTube Account.” Next, click the “Login With YouTube and Export the Playlist” option and sign in to your account.
Playlist Converter will fetch your playlist details and transfer them to your YouTube account.
SongShift
SongShift is an iOS app that allows you to transfer your songs between music streaming platforms. It’s an excellent way to keep all your song tracks in one place, no matter where you prefer to stream them.
The app is easy to use and only takes a few steps to get started!
Key Features
- It lets you fix mismatches
- Excellent user experience and interface
- Transfers tracks to multiple music streaming platforms
- Unlimited song transfer
Limitations
- Only available for iOS devices
How To Use?
Here’s how you can use the SongShift app to convert your Spotify playlist to your YouTube Music account:
Step1 Open the App Store on your iOS device, install the SongShift app and launch it.
Step2 On the app’s main page, tap “Connect Your Music” and go to the “Music Services” page. Select “Spotify” and click the “Connect” option.
Step3 Now, sign in to your Spotify account and tap the “Plus” icon at the bottom of the screen.
Step4 Tap the “Setup Source” option under New Configuration and choose “Spotify” as the source service.
Next, tap “Playlist” under the “Select Media Type” header and find your Spotify playlist.
Step5 Afterward, tap the “Setup Destination” option and select “YouTube Music.” Now, choose your destination type and tap “I’m Finished” to start transferring your Spotify playlist to YouTube Music.
Bonus Video Tutorial: Another Way To See the Music - Audio Visualization Effects
Hopefully, this article helped resolve your query, and you can now quickly transfer all your favorite playlists from Spotify to YouTube Music.
Besides, before the end, we want to show you another exciting way to feel the music - Audio Visualization Effects. The effect will intelligently match the sound in your video while also adding dynamic effects. You can try it in a user-friendly video editor Filmora . If you want to know more about the effect and how to realize it with Filmoea, please watch the video we specially prepared for you below.
Free Download For Win 7 or later(64-bit)
Free Download For macOS 10.14 or later
Conclusion
This comprehensive guide recommends the 5 best tools to help you convert Spotify playlists to YouTube Music. In addition, we’ve provided a step-by-step process of using each tool, its key features, and its limitations to help you make the right decisions.
Playlist Buddy is a free-to-use online tool that is fully dedicated to converting your Spotify playlist to YouTube within a minute. The program is quick, easy, and simple- so there’s no excuse not to try it out!
Key Features
- Transfers playlists one-by-one
- Free to use
- Compatible with YouTube and Spotify
- Can convert your lists to a CSV file
Limitations
- Cannot be used for other music streaming services
- Limited to only 250 tracks per playlist
How To Use?
To transfer your Spotify Playlist to YouTube Music using the Playlist Buddy, do the following steps:
Step1 First, open a browser on your PC and visit the “Playlist Buddy” site. Click “Login to Spotify.”
Step2 Now, click “Agree” to provide access to your account information. Click the “Sign in YouTube” button and log in to your account.
Step3 Select your Spotify playlist, click “Convert Playlist,” and Playlist Buddy will start transferring your Spotify to YouTube playlist.
Tune My Music
Tune My Music is another free tool that offers 96% accuracy while converting your Spotify playlist to YouTube Music. With this platform, you can transfer up to 1000 tracks at a time in just a few seconds.
Key Features
- Intuitive interface and workflow
- Can transfer playlists in batches
- Transfers tracks in 38 seconds
- Synchronizes two playlists from two different music services
- Backups your songs
Limitations
- Does not transfer playlists/tracks in order
- No playlist descriptions
How To Use?
The following steps will help you use the TuneMyMusic platform to convert your Spotify playlist to YouTube Music:
Step1 Visit the Tune My Music website using your browser and click the “Let’s Start” option.
Step2 On the “Select The Source” page, choose “Spotify” as your source and sign in to your account.
Step3 Now, load your Spotify playlist or paste its URL from your account. Click “Next: Select Destination” on the next page and choose “YouTube Music” from the given options.
Finally, click “Start Moving My Music” to convert your Spotify playlist to YouTube Music.
Soundiiz
If you want to quickly and instantly convert your Spotify playlist to YouTube, Soundiiz is the right solution for you! This tool is free and compatible with multiple musics streaming services.
Key Features
- 98% accuracy while transferring songs
- Fast transfer of playlists between many platforms
- No app download is required
- Excellent UI
Limitations
- Transfers albums, artists, and liked songs only in the premium version
- Can only transfer 200 tracks
How To Use
Follow these steps to convert your Spotify playlist to YouTube music using Soundiiz:
Step1 In the first step, visit the Soundiiz website and click the “Start Now” option.
Step2 Select the “Sign in with Spotify” option from the list to log in to your account and click “Access” to provide permission to access your details.
Step3 Select “YouTube Music” from the left-side panel and click “Connect.” Now, sign in to your account.
Step4 Now, open the “Transfer” tab, choose “Spotify” as a source, and go to “Playlists.” Choose the Spotify playlist and click “Confirm and Continue.”
Step5 Configure your playlist and click the “Save Configuration” option. Next, click “Confirm” and choose “YouTube Music” on the next page to convert your Spotify to a YouTube playlist.
Playlist Converter
Playlist Converter allows you to take your favorite Spotify playlists and convert them to YouTube Music, Apple Music, Google Play Music, or Amazon Music.
This handy platform is easy-to-use and only takes a few minutes to convert your favorite playlists.
Key Features
- Converts to multiple music sources and file formats
- Available for free
- Unlimited transfers
- No registration is required
Limitations
- Not much accurate
- It takes time to process
How To Use?
To use the Playlist Converter tool for converting Spotify playlists to YouTube Music, follow these steps in sequence:
Step1 Visit the Playlist Converter website using your browser and go to the “Spotify” tab.
Step2 Click “Log in with Spotify” and sign in to your account. Make sure to provide access to your details.
Step3 Select your Spotify playlist and click “Export to YouTube Account.” Next, click the “Login With YouTube and Export the Playlist” option and sign in to your account.
Playlist Converter will fetch your playlist details and transfer them to your YouTube account.
SongShift
SongShift is an iOS app that allows you to transfer your songs between music streaming platforms. It’s an excellent way to keep all your song tracks in one place, no matter where you prefer to stream them.
The app is easy to use and only takes a few steps to get started!
Key Features
- It lets you fix mismatches
- Excellent user experience and interface
- Transfers tracks to multiple music streaming platforms
- Unlimited song transfer
Limitations
- Only available for iOS devices
How To Use?
Here’s how you can use the SongShift app to convert your Spotify playlist to your YouTube Music account:
Step1 Open the App Store on your iOS device, install the SongShift app and launch it.
Step2 On the app’s main page, tap “Connect Your Music” and go to the “Music Services” page. Select “Spotify” and click the “Connect” option.
Step3 Now, sign in to your Spotify account and tap the “Plus” icon at the bottom of the screen.
Step4 Tap the “Setup Source” option under New Configuration and choose “Spotify” as the source service.
Next, tap “Playlist” under the “Select Media Type” header and find your Spotify playlist.
Step5 Afterward, tap the “Setup Destination” option and select “YouTube Music.” Now, choose your destination type and tap “I’m Finished” to start transferring your Spotify playlist to YouTube Music.
Bonus Video Tutorial: Another Way To See the Music - Audio Visualization Effects
Hopefully, this article helped resolve your query, and you can now quickly transfer all your favorite playlists from Spotify to YouTube Music.
Besides, before the end, we want to show you another exciting way to feel the music - Audio Visualization Effects. The effect will intelligently match the sound in your video while also adding dynamic effects. You can try it in a user-friendly video editor Filmora . If you want to know more about the effect and how to realize it with Filmoea, please watch the video we specially prepared for you below.
Free Download For Win 7 or later(64-bit)
Free Download For macOS 10.14 or later
Conclusion
This comprehensive guide recommends the 5 best tools to help you convert Spotify playlists to YouTube Music. In addition, we’ve provided a step-by-step process of using each tool, its key features, and its limitations to help you make the right decisions.
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- Title: [Updated] 15 DIY Music Production Tutorial Videos for Home Studios
- Author: Brian
- Created at : 2024-10-05 22:37:14
- Updated at : 2024-10-06 23:30:32
- Link: https://youtube-video-recordings.techidaily.com/updated-15-diy-music-production-tutorial-videos-for-home-studios/
- License: This work is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0.