Creating Music for Films: Why Sound Matters as Much as Picture
When people think about making a film, they usually think first about the picture. The camera angle. The lighting. The editing. The drone shot. The close-up. The slow pan across a boat, a laboratory bench, or a piece of equipment being restored.
But sound is often what makes the viewer feel something.
A film can have beautiful images and still feel flat if the sound is wrong. Equally, a simple piece of video can suddenly feel professional, emotional, exciting or thoughtful when the right music is placed underneath it.
At Philip M Russell Ltd, video has become an important part of what we do. We use film to show science experiments, sailing activities, restoration work, company projects and behind-the-scenes development. But increasingly, we are also thinking carefully about the music that sits beneath those films.
Because company films need more than video clips.
They need atmosphere.
They need rhythm.
They need identity.
And that is where original music becomes so valuable.
Music Gives a Film Its Emotional Direction
The same video clip can feel completely different depending on the music used.
A shot of a boat moving along the river could feel peaceful, adventurous, nostalgic or dramatic. A close-up of a science experiment could feel mysterious, exciting, precise or playful. A restoration video could feel like a slow, careful craft process or a determined race against time.
The picture shows what is happening.
The music suggests how we should feel about it.
That is why choosing or writing music is never just an afterthought. It is part of the storytelling.
For a sailing film, a gentle flowing theme might suggest movement, water and calm concentration. For a race day, the rhythm may need more energy, especially when the wind picks up, the boat heels over, or the crew are trying to complete a tack without losing too much speed.
For a science video, the music must support the explanation without getting in the way. It should create interest, but not become so busy that the viewer stops listening to the teaching.
For a restoration update on Champagne, the Thames A-Rater, the music needs to do something different again. It has to reflect age, craftsmanship, ambition and perhaps a little bit of humour, because buying and restoring a classic racing boat is not exactly a small weekend job.
Why Original Music Is Different from Generic Background Tracks
There is nothing wrong with using stock music when it is appropriate. It is quick, convenient and often perfectly acceptable.
But generic background music can also make films feel like everyone else’s.
Many online videos now use the same types of tracks: cheerful corporate ukulele, dramatic trailer-style drums, soft piano, or electronic background loops. They can work, but they rarely create a strong identity.
Original music gives a film something more personal.
It can be written to fit the exact pace of the edit. It can match the character of the project. It can include repeated themes that viewers begin to associate with a particular series.
For Philip M Russell Ltd, this matters because our films are not all the same. A laboratory demonstration is different from a sailing race. A tuition video is different from a boat restoration update. A behind-the-scenes R&D film is different from a piece about photography or video production.
Each one needs its own sound.
Creating Themes for Different Projects
One useful approach is to think in terms of themes.
A theme does not have to be a full orchestral score. It might be a short musical idea, a chord sequence, a rhythm, a keyboard sound or a melody that can be reused and adapted.
For example, a science video might use a clean, precise electronic sound. Something that suggests curiosity, measurement and discovery. It should feel modern, but not distracting.
A sailing film might use a more open, flowing sound. Perhaps something with movement in the rhythm to suggest wind, waves and motion across the water.
A Champagne restoration update could have a slightly warmer and more traditional feel, reflecting the age and character of the boat. It could also develop over time, starting with uncertainty and gradually becoming more confident as the restoration progresses.
That is one of the great advantages of writing music in-house. The music can grow with the project.
The first Champagne video might sound tentative: “What have we done?” Later films could become stronger and more triumphant as the boat is repaired, varnished, rigged and eventually sailed.
The music becomes part of the journey.
Matching Music to the Edit
When creating music for a film, it is not enough to write something that sounds good on its own. It has to work with the edit.
A video editing timeline has its own rhythm. There are cuts, pauses, close-ups, voiceovers, titles, transitions and moments where the viewer needs time to look carefully.
Music can support all of that.
A change in chord can arrive as the title appears. A quieter section can sit underneath an explanation. A stronger rhythm can begin when the action starts. A final chord can land exactly as the closing shot fades out.
This is where the connection between music production and video editing becomes so useful. Rather than finding a track and forcing the video to fit it, the music can be shaped around the film.
For a science experiment, that might mean leaving space for the spoken explanation. For a sailing film, it might mean building energy as the boat approaches a mark. For a restoration update, it might mean slowing down during close-up shots of sanding, varnishing or fitting a new part.
The music should never fight the picture.
It should help the picture breathe.
Practical Example: Science Videos
In science videos, clarity comes first.
The viewer is often trying to understand a concept, follow a demonstration, or connect what they see with an equation or exam idea. Music can help create interest, but it must not overpower the teaching.
For example, a physics video showing Archimedes’ principle might use calm, steady music to support the visual nature of the experiment. The music should make the demonstration feel purposeful without turning it into a dramatic trailer.
A chemistry video might use a slightly more curious tone, especially when a colour change, reaction or practical result is about to appear. But again, the explanation must remain central.
This is where restraint matters.
Sometimes the best music is not the most impressive music. It is the music that supports the learning without drawing attention to itself.
Practical Example: Sailing Films
Sailing films have a very different energy.
There is movement, weather, water, wind, mistakes, recovery, humour and sometimes a little mild panic. The soundtrack has to reflect that.
A calm river scene might suit gentle music with space and flow. A race sequence might need a stronger pulse. A sudden gybe, a capsize, or a broken camera mount flying into the river may need a musical shift that adds drama without making the moment feel artificial.
The challenge with sailing video is that the real sound is often messy. Wind noise, water noise, shouting, engines, race signals and camera handling sounds can all compete with the music.
So the music has to be chosen carefully. Too much bass or too much rhythmic clutter can make everything feel chaotic. A good sailing soundtrack should add energy while still allowing the natural sounds of the river and the boat to remain part of the experience.
The sound of sailing is part of the story too.
Practical Example: Champagne Restoration Updates
The Champagne restoration project is a perfect example of why original music matters.
This is not just a boat repair project. It is a story about taking on something ambitious, learning as we go, respecting the history of a Thames A-Rater, and slowly bringing a boat back towards the water.
The music for this kind of series needs character.
It should not feel like a random background track pasted underneath a workshop video. It should feel as though it belongs to Champagne.
A recurring theme could appear in different forms across the restoration series. A quieter version for sanding and inspection. A more playful version for unexpected problems. A stronger version for progress updates. Eventually, perhaps, a more complete version when Champagne is finally sailing again.
That gives the audience a sense of continuity.
They are not just watching separate videos.
They are following a project.
The Value of Musical Identity
Businesses often think about visual identity: logos, fonts, colours, thumbnails and website design.
But sound identity matters too.
A recognisable musical style can help connect different films together. It gives the company’s video output a more consistent feel. Viewers may not consciously say, “That is the Philip M Russell Ltd sound,” but they will feel that the films belong together.
This is especially useful when a company works across several areas.
Science teaching, video production, photography, sailing, R&D and restoration work might seem like separate activities. But with consistent storytelling, visual style and music, they become part of the same company identity.
The music helps join the dots.
The Practical Side: Keyboard, Headphones and Timeline
In practice, creating music for films is not always glamorous.
It often starts with a keyboard, headphones, a video editing timeline and a lot of trial and error.
A piece of music might sound good by itself, but not work under a voiceover. A rhythm might feel exciting for ten seconds, but irritating after two minutes. A melody might be too strong and distract from the subject. A sound might suit a science video but feel completely wrong for a sailing film.
So the process becomes one of testing, adjusting and listening.
Does the music support the edit?
Does it leave enough space for speech?
Does it fit the mood of the film?
Does it help the viewer understand what matters?
Does it make the company’s work feel more distinctive?
These are creative decisions, but they are also practical business decisions. Good music helps people stay engaged. It makes a film feel more polished. It strengthens the message. It can turn a simple update into something memorable.
Personal Reflection: Sound Changes the Way We See
One of the most interesting things about making company films is discovering how much the sound changes the picture.
A workshop shot can suddenly feel thoughtful. A science experiment can feel more intriguing. A sailing clip can feel more exciting. A restoration update can feel more like part of a long-term story.
The camera captures the facts.
The music shapes the experience.
That does not mean every video needs a grand soundtrack. Some films need only a light touch. Some need silence in places. Some need the natural sound of the room, the water, the tools or the experiment.
But every film benefits from a conscious decision about sound.
Silence is a choice.
Natural sound is a choice.
Music is a choice.
The important thing is not to leave sound as the final thing added in a hurry.
Conclusion: Picture Shows the Work, Music Gives It Meaning
Creating music for films is not just about making videos sound nicer. It is about storytelling, identity and atmosphere.
For Philip M Russell Ltd, original music allows each project to have its own character. Science videos can feel clear and curious. Sailing films can feel energetic and human. Champagne restoration updates can feel personal, ambitious and connected to a larger journey.
Good video shows what happened.
Good music helps the viewer care.
In a world full of clips, updates and background noise, sound is one of the things that can make a company film stand out. It gives rhythm to the edit, emotion to the image, and identity to the story.
That is why sound matters as much as picture.
Sometimes, the difference between a collection of video clips and a finished film is not what you see.
It is what you hear.
