// Auto-VJ
The first visual instrument
an AI can run.
Connect an AI assistant and Luxaudica becomes a VJ who has heard every track before — it sees the screen, moves every control, runs your cues, and even builds brand-new scenes, while you talk to it like a colleague. No other music visualizer can do this.
// It sees
The assistant can look at the output.
It renders the live frame, and — uniquely — privately auditions any look at four musical moments (quiet, groove, build-up, drop) before it dares put it on your wall. It reads honest performance numbers, so it never ships something heavy to a struggling machine.
// It drives
Every control, by name — and the whole show.
Intensity, punch, glow, the colour grade, scene changes, saved looks, cues, transport, auto-pilot. Direct it by feeling — "too frantic", "warmer", "make the drop land" — and it does the knob-work. Blackout and panic stay under your hand no matter what.
// It creates
New scenes from a sentence.
Describe a look — "a lighthouse beam through slow rain, mostly darkness" — and it authors a brand-new scene into your library, checks its own work by eye, and iterates until it lands. No code on your side of the conversation.
// Say it, it happens
Direct by feeling, not by knob.
Real things you can say. Click to copy one and edit it.
Look at what's on screen. I'm playing slow house all evening — make it feel expensive: darker floor, warmer highlights, drops that swell instead of strobe. Snapshot after each change.
Build me a scene called "Harbor": navy darkness, a slow lighthouse beam, rain that thickens with the music. Audition it until the quiet is genuinely dark and the drop feels like the beam catching you. Save it as Harbor Night.
Run a 45-minute looping show from my saved looks — calm first, peak in the middle, land soft. 3-second crossfades. Start it, then tell me if anything looks heavy.
// Open by design
It speaks MCP — the open standard for AI tools.
Luxaudica exposes a full control surface over MCP, the same open protocol Claude and other assistants use to operate real tools. Connect once — a single local, opt-in connector — and the assistant has Luxaudica's whole surface at its disposal. Nothing leaves your Mac.