Advertising Rights

Audiodrome is a royalty-free music platform designed specifically for content creators who need affordable, high-quality background music for videos, podcasts, social media, and commercial projects. Unlike subscription-only services, Audiodrome offers both free tracks and simple one-time licensing with full commercial rights, including DMCA-safe use on YouTube, Instagram, and TikTok. All music is original, professionally produced, and PRO-free, ensuring zero copyright claims. It’s ideal for YouTubers, freelancers, marketers, and anyone looking for budget-friendly audio that’s safe to monetize.

Advertising rights are the permissions that let you use music in paid or promotional campaigns such as video ads, brand spots, trailers, sponsored social content, and other marketing materials. In practice, this usually means clearing the audiovisual use of the composition and, if you are using an existing recording, clearing the sound recording too. Public performance licenses alone do not replace that step.

Quick facts:
Also called: ad use rights – commercial advertising rights – promo use rights
Applies to: online ads, TV spots, radio ads, paid social, trailers, brand promos
Used for: synchronizing music with promotional content and running ad campaigns lawfully
Not the same as: a general public performance license or standard creator-use license.

Example:
A brand wants to run a 15-second Instagram ad using a popular track. Getting permission to stream or publicly perform music elsewhere does not automatically cover that ad; the campaign usually needs sync clearance for the song and master use clearance for the recording before launch.

Gotchas:

  • “Licensed music” is too vague. A license for background playback, creator content, or venue use may not include paid advertising use.
  • Using an existing commercial recording often means two permissions: one for the musical work and one for the sound recording.
  • There is no compulsory sync or master-use license for audiovisual advertising, so rights are typically negotiated directly.
  • Ad platforms can still reject or restrict campaigns if copyrighted content is used without proper authorization or required certification.

FAQs

Usually yes, if the content is being promoted as an ad. Organic posting rights and paid advertising rights are often treated differently in licensing scope, so the license should explicitly cover promotional or paid media use.

Not always. “Royalty-free” only describes how fees are structured. You still need to check whether the license includes advertising, paid media, geographic scope, term length, and platform coverage. This point depends on the specific license terms, not on the label alone. I cannot confirm ad rights without the actual license.

No, not by themselves. ASCAP states that mechanical and synchronization rights are licensed by writers or publishers, and BMI’s licenses cover public performance uses for businesses rather than replacing ad sync clearance.

Advertising usually carries broader commercial value, larger audiences, stronger brand association, and heavier distribution, so licensors often price it separately and more tightly than standard editorial or creator use. This is an industry inference supported by the fact that sync and master licenses are negotiated voluntarily and often depend on use details.

At minimum: media channels, paid vs organic use, term, territory, editing rights, client transfer rights, and whether the license covers only the composition or both composition and master recording. I cannot confirm sufficiency without reviewing the actual agreement.


Related terms

Sync License • Master Use License • Commercial UsePublic Performance LicenseUsage ScopePlatform-Specific License • Rights Clearance • License ProofReels Ads