Royalty-Free Music for Winery and Vineyard Videos
Choose background music for harvest footage, tasting rooms, cellar work, and rural hospitality

Winery and vineyard videos often need music that feels warm, polished, and calm without pulling attention away from the place. The right track can support rows of vines, harvest crews, barrel rooms, tasting pours, food pairings, and guest scenes without making the video feel like a generic travel ad.
The music choice also affects publishing. A winery may use the same video on its website, YouTube, Instagram, paid social ads, a sales deck, or a client delivery package. This page helps you choose music that fits the edit and the business use.
Match the track to the winery story
A vineyard video usually has one main job. It may sell the estate, explain the harvest, invite people to a tasting, show a wine club shipment, or document a bottle release. Pick the track around that job first.
Harvest footage
Harvest footage works best with music that has gentle movement. Light percussion, acoustic guitar, soft piano, or subtle strings can support hands-on work without making the scene feel rushed.
For slow vineyard drone shots, use spacious music with a gradual build.
Tasting room videos
Tasting room videos need music that feels welcoming and premium. A warm acoustic track or light jazz-inspired bed can fit pours, table settings, guest reactions, and food pairings.
Keep the music steady so voiceover, natural sound, and staff interviews stay clear.
Wine production scenes
Wine production scenes need music that feels clean and focused. Barrel rooms, bottling lines, cellar work, and label shots often need a track with precision.
A polished ambient or light corporate track can keep the edit professional without turning it into a factory tour.
Rural hospitality videos
Rural hospitality videos need music that supports comfort, space, and a sense of place. Use warm acoustic, soft cinematic, or calm folk-inspired tracks for vineyard stays, outdoor dining, estate tours, and guest arrival scenes.
The track should make the property feel inviting without making the video feel like a travel montage.
Choose music by publishing format
A short social reel needs a track that makes sense fast. The first few seconds should support the opening shot, like sunrise over vines, a cork pull, a glass pour, or a harvest clip. Use a track with a clear start so the edit feels intentional.
A website hero video usually needs a softer music bed. The goal is to support the visuals while visitors read the page or browse booking details. Avoid tracks that change too often, because quick shifts can distract from copy, menus, booking forms, and product details.
A longer brand film can carry a more cinematic track. This works well for founder stories, estate history, winemaker interviews, sustainability features, and seasonal campaigns. Use music with enough space for voiceover and enough movement to carry transitions.
A paid ad needs extra care. Use music that has clear commercial rights, keep the license details with the campaign files, and confirm the track fits the final platform and ad format before launch.
Clear music rights for winery videos and client delivery
Winery and vineyard videos need music rights that cover the finished video, not only the edit on your laptop. Common publishing channels include the winery website, YouTube, Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn, paid social ads, tasting room screens, sales presentations, and client delivery.
Unlicensed music can lead to copyright claims, muted audio, takedown requests, delayed campaigns, ad review issues, repost problems, or extra proof requests from a client. A freelancer delivering a winery video also needs permission for the client to publish the finished work.
Audiodrome covers winery and vineyard video projects with flexible licensing for personal, commercial, and business use. With one-time payment and lifetime access, you can use licensed tracks in finished videos, ads, social posts, presentations, and client work.

