Musical Work
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.
A musical work is the underlying song or composition, meaning the music itself and any accompanying words. It is legally separate from a sound recording, so the composition and the recorded track can have different owners, different rights, and different licensing paths.
Quick facts:
Also called: musical composition, song, underlying work
Applies to: melody, harmony, structure, and lyrics where applicable
Used for: identifying rights in the composition itself rather than a specific recorded performance
Not the same as: a master recording, phonogram, or released audio track.
Example:
A songwriter writes a song and an artist records it in the studio. The song itself is the musical work, while that studio version is the sound recording, so a user may need one permission for the composition and another for the recording.
Gotchas:
- A musical work is not the same as the sound recording. The composition and the recorded performance are separate works.
- A musical composition can include accompanying words, so lyrics may sit inside the musical-work layer.
- Owning or licensing a master does not automatically mean you control the composition. Those rights are often owned or administered separately.
- A public-domain composition and a modern recording of it can have different legal status because they are different works.
- Jurisdictions can define “musical work” differently in detail. For example, U.K. legislation defines it as music exclusive of words or action intended to be sung, spoken, or performed with the music, so terminology is not perfectly uniform across countries.
FAQs
Related terms
Sound Recording • Master Rights • Mechanical License • Performance Rights • Sync License • Public Domain • Copyright

