Royalty-Free Music for Rebrand Videos
Choose music for website relaunches, name changes, and brand refresh campaigns with a clear, polished sound

A rebrand video has one job: help people understand that the brand has changed, and that the change was intentional.
The music has to support that shift. A weak track can make a new identity feel unfinished. A track that feels too dramatic can make a simple refresh feel bigger than it is. The right track gives the reveal a clear shape and helps the audience move from the old brand to the new one.
Choose music for the type of rebrand video
Start with the specific change the video needs to explain. A full company rename, a brand refresh, a website relaunch, and a repositioning video all need different levels of build, energy, and clarity.
Full company rename
A company rename needs a track with a clear build and release. The music should create a before-and-after moment, especially if the video moves from the old logo, old website, or old message into the new identity.
Choose a track that gives the reveal enough weight without making the announcement feel dramatic for the wrong reason.
Brand refresh
A brand refresh needs a lighter touch. The track should feel clean, polished, and current without making the update feel larger than it is.
This works well for videos that show new colors, updated typography, a redesigned website, or a clearer brand message.
Website relaunch
A website relaunch needs music with motion. The track should support screen recordings, UI closeups, page transitions, and product or service messages.
Pick something with enough pace to carry the edit, but enough space for captions, voiceover, and on-screen details.
Repositioning video
A repositioning video needs confidence and control. The track should support voiceover, hold steady under key lines, and give the final message a strong close.
This is useful when a company explains a new audience focus, a new market, or a clearer promise.
Public relaunch campaign
A public relaunch campaign needs music that can work across several versions of the same announcement.
The track may need to fit the hero video, social cuts, paid ads, website banner video, and sales deck opener. A consistent track or track family can help the campaign feel connected.
Match the music to the reveal timing
A rebrand video usually has a clear shape. It shows the reason for change, introduces the new direction, then lands on the new identity.
Music should follow that edit.
For a voiceover-led announcement, use a track with steady movement and enough space for spoken lines. The music should carry the edit without competing with the message.
For a short social teaser, choose a track that reaches the main moment quickly. The first few seconds need to set the tone, then the reveal should arrive before the edit loses focus.
Use royalty-free music that fits business publishing
Rebrand videos often travel across several places. A team may use the same video on the company website, LinkedIn, YouTube, paid social, a launch email, a sales deck, and an internal meeting.
That makes licensing part of the music decision.
Audiodrome’s license covers permitted commercial, client, social, online video, and business uses when the music stays inside the finished project. If you deliver a rebrand video to a client, deliver the finished file and keep the raw music file out of the handoff.
That fits real rebrand workflows. A freelance editor can cut a launch video for a client. A marketing team can publish a website relaunch video. An agency can prepare social versions for a public brand refresh campaign. The music stays inside the finished work, and the team keeps the license details with the project files.
