For more info on the particular licenses, you can visit their. The good thing is that you can filter search results by license. So, because you want the music for marketing purposes, you would go ahead and uncheck the “non-commercial use” box. As you’ll see with most of these sites, you’re not going to find a Beyonce-level track or anything. But the music at FMA is very pleasant and certainly suits the purpose. At the end of the day, it’s free to download. You should also check out the site’s, which showcases the music and where it might fit into different types of content.
Has a large selection of royalty-free music. All together, there are around 2,000 tracks created by musician Kevin MacLeod. You can download for free as long as you credit the musician and site. Incompetech arranges the tracks in collections according to genre, such as “Disco and Lounge” or “Rock Classic.” There’s also a section of “Film Scoring Moods” where you can download tracks that would fit “Horror,” “Mystery,” or “Noire” themes, for instance. Plus, there’s world music inspired by beats from different countries such as Africa and Brazil.
You’ll definitely want to check out the lists of. These will help you to discover what the site has to offer. If you want to download the entire library of music, it’ll cost you a one-off fee of $38. Envato Market. Also known as AudioJungle, offers royalty-free background music. Paid tracks start at $1. The site has a global community that uploads their own tracks.