Royalty-Free Music for Energy Company Videos
Choose background music for utility explainers, solar promos, training, ads, and corporate content

Energy company videos need music that sounds clear, professional, and steady. A solar launch video, a utility explainer, a safety-training module, and a power infrastructure update all need different pacing, but they share one goal. The music should support the message without pulling attention away from the work.
Match the music to the type of energy video
Start with the video’s job, then choose music that supports the message without pulling attention away from the visuals, voiceover, or instructions.
Use a brighter track for clean energy stories
Renewable energy videos often work well with light electronic, acoustic, or hybrid tracks. The music can feel open and forward-moving while still staying professional. This works for videos about clean energy programs, sustainability updates, field teams, community projects, and mixed renewable portfolios.
Give solar promos a clear sense of motion
Solar company videos need music that feels bright, active, and practical. A steady beat can support rooftop installs, panel close-ups, customer stories, and sales explainers. Keep the track clean enough for voiceover, especially if the video explains financing, installation steps, or expected savings.
Keep utility explainers calm and easy to follow
Utility explainer videos need music that sits low under the message. The viewer needs to understand rates, billing, outage planning, service updates, safety notices, or energy-saving steps. Choose a simple underscore track that supports pacing without competing with the narration.
Use steady movement for wind project footage
Wind energy videos often need music with space, rhythm, and a gradual build. The track should support wide landscape shots, turbine footage, maintenance crews, and project updates. Avoid music that feels too dramatic unless the video is a brand film or campaign spot.
Keep energy efficiency content clear and practical
Energy efficiency videos often explain actions the viewer can take, like upgrading equipment, changing usage habits, or joining a program. Use music that feels helpful and focused. A light corporate or acoustic track can keep the edit moving while leaving room for tips, captions, and voiceover.
Give infrastructure videos more weight
Power infrastructure videos need music with a steady rhythm and a grounded feel. Subtle cinematic or corporate tracks can support grid modernization, substations, transmission lines, control rooms, and construction footage. The goal is to show scale and reliability without making the video feel like a trailer.
Keep safety training music restrained
Energy safety training videos need calm, simple music. The track should help the viewer stay focused on procedures, hazards, equipment, and step-by-step instructions. Avoid sharp builds, busy melodies, or emotional cues that distract from the training content.
Choose a track that leaves room for the message
Energy videos often carry important information. The music should give the edit shape, then leave space for voiceover, interviews, data, and on-screen text.
For spoken explainers, avoid tracks with busy melodies during key points. A simple pulse, soft piano, light synth, or restrained percussion bed often works better than a track with constant lead lines. The editor can place the strongest part of the track under the opening, a transition, or the final CTA.
For field footage, drone shots, installation videos, and project recaps, use music with a clear rise. This helps the edit move from problem, to work in progress, to finished result.
For safety videos, keep the track steady and low. The music should support attention, not drama. Clear instructions, visible steps, and calm pacing are more useful than tension.
For sales or investor videos, use music that feels confident but controlled. The track should support credibility, not hype.
Audiodrome’s picks for energy company videos
Check the publishing path before you choose the track
The right music depends on where the final video goes. A training video for employees has a different publishing path than a paid LinkedIn ad or a client campaign for a solar installer.
Before you buy a track, list the actual uses. Common energy-company uses include website videos, sales presentations, social clips, paid ads, conference screens, YouTube uploads, client deliverables, internal training, and community updates.
Check the license against the way the video will be used. A paid ad needs commercial advertising rights. Client work needs permission for the client to publish the finished video. Internal training needs coverage for long-term business use. A utility explainer may appear on the company website, YouTube, LinkedIn, and Facebook, so the license should cover each publishing channel.
Audiodrome’s license covers music used inside finished projects, including ads, social videos, client work, training content, presentations, websites, and business videos. You can deliver the finished project to a client for publishing, as long as the music stays embedded in the video and you do not hand over the raw track or stems.
Keep the receipt, license terms, and track details with the project files before you publish. Store them with the final export, voiceover script, and edit files. This makes future reposts, audits, edits, and client questions easier to handle.

