
Open Music Archive is another great place where you’ll find out-of-copyright music that you’re free to use commercially. Instead, the music collection is all over the place but if you spend enough time here, you’re sure to uncover a gem or two. Because it’s user-curated, you won’t find a uniform music pattern here. Opsound is an alt music website where artists can upload their song to be distributed for free. You’ll find the site broken down by categories, genres, and artists. Their music collection is as you’d expect, extensive. On you’ll find old documents, and even console games you can play right in the browser. MusicĪ is the best place to find things from our history, and not just the internet. Forget adding them to a video, these are great pieces of music that belong in your music library anyway. So you’ll find music from the likes of Beethoven and Mozart for free. Music that’s older than around half a century is usually in the public domain. Musopen is a music library that hosts all sorts of out-of-copyright music. If you want all of it, there’s a single click download option for $49. Here you’ll find an extensive collection of free-to-use music spread across various categories – from hard rock to electronic. Incompetech is a one-man royalty-free music shop run by Kevin MacLeod. All songs are available in 320 Kbps MP3 files.

The music is broken down by categories and downloading takes one click. YouTube Audio Library has a really great collection of free music, and their web interface for sampling the music is way better than any other site on this list. Probably the best place to get royalty-free music for your YouTube video is… YouTube.
