Music for Review Videos
Choose tracks that stay neutral, support product focus, and work for the creator and business publishing

Review videos need music that supports the edit without steering the viewer too hard.
Overly dramatic music can make a normal product feel overpraised. A silly track can make a serious review feel weak. Music that competes with the voiceover can make specs, pros, cons, and test results harder to follow.
Good music for review videos feels light, steady, and controlled. It gives the video movement while the product, footage, and spoken points stay in front.
Choose music that supports the review, not the verdict
A review video asks the viewer to trust the person explaining the product.
That trust can drop when the music tells the viewer what to feel before the review earns it. Huge cinematic builds, aggressive drops, and overly sentimental piano can make the video feel pushed.
A cleaner choice is a track with light movement and a steady tone. Think soft electronic beds, minimal indie grooves, calm corporate tracks, light beats, or warm ambient music.
These styles work well for:
Product review videos
Tech review videos
Software reviews
Camera and gear reviews
Service reviews
Affiliate review videos
Brand comparison clips
Sponsored review content
The goal is simple. Keep attention on the product.
A phone review needs music that sits behind camera tests, battery notes, and real usage examples. In a SaaS review, the track should make screen recordings feel less flat without covering the voice. A camera review needs gentle edit pace while the footage proves the point.
A useful review track usually has:
A steady tempo
A clean intro
Light percussion
Simple melodic parts
Low drama
Room for voiceover
No sudden mood changes
The track should give the edit life, then stay out of the way.
Match the music to the review format
Review videos use different pacing depending on the product and the creator’s style.
A hands-on gear review needs a different track than a polished brand review. A desk setup review needs a different track than a side-by-side comparison. Pick the music after you know the job each section needs to do.
For product demos
Use music with steady motion and soft detail.
This works well behind shots of the product in use, app walkthroughs, interface tours, before-and-after clips, and feature demonstrations. The track should keep the edit moving while the viewer watches what the product does.
Avoid tracks with large drops or big transitions here. They can pull focus away from the demo.
For pros and cons sections
Use a more neutral bed.
This is where the viewer expects honesty. Keep the music balanced so the positives and negatives feel equally clear. A calm electronic bed or minimal pulse usually works better than a track with strong emotional cues.
The music should make the section feel organized, not persuasive.
For sponsored reviews
Use extra restraint.
A sponsored review already asks the viewer for trust. Music that feels too excited can make the review sound like an ad, even when the creator gives fair feedback.
A light, clean track helps the review feel professional without overselling the product.
For comparison videos
Use consistent music across each product section.
Changing tracks between Product A and Product B can make one product feel more exciting than the other. A steady background track helps the comparison feel fair.
Use edit points, graphics, and narration to separate sections instead of making the music do that job.
Pick licensed music that fits repeat publishing
Review creators often publish in a repeatable format.
A tech channel may review one product every week. A freelancer may deliver product videos for different clients. A small business may post review-style demos across YouTube, Instagram, LinkedIn, and its own website.
That workflow needs music that is easy to reuse inside finished projects.
YouTube lists getting permission, Creative Commons terms, the YouTube Audio Library, and Creator Music as options for using music safely on the platform. Creator Music licensing happens inside YouTube Studio, and licensed tracks can affect how a video is protected from claims.
Free Tools:
Can I use this track on YouTube?
YouTube Music Copyright Checker
That platform context matters, but a review creator still needs to check the license for the exact track and the exact use.
A review video can include:
A monetized YouTube upload
An affiliate link
A sponsored mention
A client delivery
A paid ad cutdown
A repost on social media
A product page embed
A portfolio version
Each use needs music that fits the publishing plan.
That makes Audiodrome a practical fit when your review format repeats across channels or clients.
