Ravan
Ravan · License

Use any Ravan album in your work.

Every track on Ravan is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0. That means you can use the music in videos, podcasts, films, ads, games, apps, livestreams, anything. No royalty splits, no paid sync licensing, no permission email. Just credit Ravan.

You can
  • Use the music in monetized YouTube videos
  • Use it in podcasts, including paid/sponsored ones
  • Use it as a soundtrack in films and short films
  • Use it in commercials and brand work
  • Use it in video games, apps, and software
  • Remix, edit, and chop the tracks
  • Stream it during livestreams and events
You must
  • Credit Ravan and link to ravan.one
  • Note the license (CC BY 4.0) where the credit appears
  • Indicate if you modified the track (a quick note suffices)
That's it. You don't need to ask. You don't need to email us. You don't owe royalties.

How to credit

Pick whichever fits the surface. Credit in the video description, podcast show notes, end card, or about section is fine.

Short (one-liner, in-frame credit)
Music: Ravan — ravan.one (CC BY 4.0)
Standard (track-specific credit)
Music: "[Track Title]" by Ravan, licensed under CC BY 4.0. ravan.one
Long (YouTube description, podcast show notes)
Music by Ravan — https://ravan.one
Licensed under Creative Commons CC BY 4.0
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Each track page has a one-tap "copy credit" button with the track title pre-filled.

YouTube Content ID

Ravan music is not enrolled in YouTube's Content ID system. You should not receive a copyright claim for using a Ravan track. If a video using Ravan music ever does get a claim or strike:

  1. File a dispute citing the CC BY 4.0 license at creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0.
  2. Link to this page (https://ravan.one/license) and the specific track page as proof of license.
  3. Email hello@ravan.one and we'll send a written license confirmation within 24 hours.

The fine print

You can't imply Ravan endorses your project. You can't re-upload Ravan tracks to streaming platforms (Spotify, Apple Music, etc.) under your own name and collect royalties — that violates the platforms' terms even if the license technically allows it. And you can't apply additional restrictions on top (like enrolling derivative works in Content ID) that prevent others from using the music the same way you did.

Other than that, if it's allowed by CC BY 4.0 (full legal code), it's allowed by us.