30 Days of Video Content Ideas for Musicians | Never Run Out of Posts

The hardest part of being a musician right now isn’t actually writing the songs—it’s the soul-crushing pressure to “be a content creator” every single day.

If the thought of staring at a blank TikTok draft makes you want to throw your guitar out a window, this is for you. Here is a month’s worth of stuff you can actually film in five minutes, so you can get back to the music.

Phase 1: The “Who Is This Person?” Stage (Days 1–10)

Stop trying to go viral for a second and just let people meet you.

  1. The Hook: Put a text bubble over a video of you playing your best riff that says, “If you like [Artist Name], you might like my stuff.”

  2. The “Before” Photos: Dust off those embarrassing photos of you at your first talent show or in your middle school garage band.

  3. The MVP: That one pedal or beat-up acoustic guitar you literally couldn’t live without. Explain why.

  4. The Mood Board: Play 10 seconds of a song that made you want to be a musician in the first place.

  5. The Reality of the “Studio”: Don’t clean up. Show the coffee mugs, the tangled cables, and the corner of the bedroom where you actually work.

  6. What’s on Your Phone: Screen-record your “Recently Played” on Spotify. No gatekeeping.

  7. The Big Secret: Just announce a song title. That’s it. Keep them guessing.

  8. The “Why”: Pick one lyric that people always ask about and tell the story of the night you wrote it.

  9. The Mail Drop: Did your new merch just arrive? Show us the box.

  10. The Truth: Why are you doing this? Tell the camera exactly what music means to you when the cameras aren’t rolling.

Phase 2: The “How the Sausage is Made” Stage (Days 11–20)

People love seeing the mess. It makes them feel like they’re part of the process.

  1. The Rough Draft: Play a snippet of a voice memo from 3 AM, then transition into the final produced track.

  2. The Fail Reel: A 15-second clip of you forgetting your own lyrics or hitting a spectacularly wrong note.

  3. The Spark: “I started with this drum loop…” Show how a song grows from one tiny sound.

  4. The Rehearsal: Set your phone up in the corner while the band is just jamming. Don’t overthink the lighting.

  5. The Pre-Music Ritual: What’s the first thing you do when you sit down to create? Coffee? Lighting a candle? Pacing the room?

  6. The Q&A: Answer the one question you get asked most often at gigs or in the comments.

  7. The Gig Bag: Empty out your backpack. What are the essentials you take to every show?

  8. The “Easter Egg”: Point out a tiny detail in a song—like a background vocal or a weird synth layer—that most people miss.

  9. The Team: Introduce the producer or the friend who helps you stay sane.

  10. The Look: What are you wearing on stage tonight? Give us a quick fit check.

Phase 3: Making Some Noise (Days 21–30)

Time to stop talking at people and start talking with them.

  1. The Open Verse: Play a chord progression and leave a gap. Tell people to sing their own melody over it.

  2. Finish the Line: Sing half a verse, then stop. Ask the comments to guess (or write) the next line.

  3. The Cover: Someone asked for a specific song in your last video? Play a 30-second version of it.

  4. The Build-Up: Record a video that builds tension and cuts off just as the beat is about to drop.

  5. The “How it Started”: Footage from your first-ever gig versus your most recent one.

  6. The Shoutout: Film yourself reacting to a nice comment someone left. It goes a long way.

  7. The Decision: Post two different versions of a chorus or two album covers. Let the audience vote.

  8. The Blur: A fast montage of your day—from the morning coffee to the late-night mixing session.

  9. The Final Push: Put the pre-save link in your bio and play the catchiest part of the new single.

  10. The Big Thanks: A simple, face-to-camera video saying thank you for sticking around this month.