Royalty-Free Music for Industrial Videos
Choose background music about energy, engineering, infrastructure, and heavy industry

Industrial videos need music that feels steady, capable, and clear. A film about a power grid upgrade, a bridge project, or a large engineering build has a different job than a product demo or factory walkthrough.
The music should support scale without turning the video into a trailer. It should add pace, structure, and confidence while leaving room for voiceover, interviews, machinery sounds, and on-site footage.
Choose music that matches scale and clarity
Industrial sector videos often show large systems at work. That can mean wind farms, transmission lines, refineries, ports, bridges, data centers, water systems, or engineering teams on site.
The music should help the viewer understand scale without making the project feel exaggerated. A steady pulse can support drone footage. Light tension can work for inspection, planning, or before-and-after sequences. Warm piano or restrained synths can fit safety, training, or community-facing explainers.
For a corporate infrastructure film, pick music that feels measured and dependable. Energy transition videos usually need forward motion without turning the track into a hype piece. An engineering case study works better with enough space for spoken detail, site footage, and technical visuals.
A useful test: lower the music under the voiceover. If the track still gives the video shape without fighting the narration, it is probably a good fit.
Match the track to the actual industrial use case
“Industrial video” can mean several project types, so the best track depends on the job the video needs to do.
Energy company explainers
An energy company explainer needs music that feels clean, steady, and capable. Use modern instrumental tracks with light movement, controlled low-end, and enough space for voiceover. This works well for grid upgrades, renewable energy projects, utility updates, and public-facing technical explainers.
Infrastructure project films
An infrastructure film often needs a sense of scale without too much drama. Steady percussion, warm synths, and gradual builds can support footage of bridges, roads, ports, rail, water systems, and large construction sites. The track should help the viewer follow progress, not distract from the work on screen.
Engineering case studies
An engineering case study usually needs music that gives structure while leaving room for technical detail. Subtle electronic textures, light piano, and soft rhythmic layers work well under interviews, CAD visuals, site footage, and before-and-after sequences. Keep the track clear enough for narration and client results.
Heavy industry promos
Heavy industry promos can handle more weight, but the tone still needs control. Big drums, darker synths, and mechanical textures can work for launch films, trade show reels, mining footage, steel production, and large-scale industrial brand videos. Avoid tracks that make a safety video, investor update, or technical walkthrough feel overdone.
Check the license before the video leaves the edit
Industrial videos often travel across business channels. A single project can appear on a company website, YouTube channel, LinkedIn page, sales deck, trade show screen, and paid campaign.
That makes licensing part of the edit, not a last step after export.
Check that the music license covers commercial use, client delivery, paid promotion, and the channels in your plan. Keep the track name, receipt, license terms, and final video file together so your team or client can show proof later.
For client work, ask where the finished video will appear before you choose the track. A website case study, LinkedIn post, paid ad, event screen, and sales presentation can all use the same core video, but the music needs to feel usable across those placements.
Audiodrome’s license covers use of licensed tracks when they stay embedded inside a finished Project, such as a video, advertisement, podcast episode, game level, or presentation slide. It grants sync and master rights for permitted uses, but it does not transfer copyright ownership or allow standalone distribution of the raw track.
That distinction is practical. You can place the music inside an industrial video. Keep the raw audio file out of the client handoff unless the agreement allows that specific use.

