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Lullaby Mozart and Brahms | 2 Hours 🌌

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100+ countries

Families in over 100 countries fall asleep to our lullabies every night.

Years on YouTube

A growing library we've been carefully crafting for several years.

Classical melodies

Real lullabies β€” Brahms, Mozart, Twinkle Twinkle β€” gently rearranged.

No harsh sounds

No sudden flashes, no loud effects β€” designed to soothe, never startle.

About this lullaby

Here you get 2 hours of quiet music in one long video. If your child only needs help falling asleep rather than staying asleep, this is the right length. It carries them through the drowsy stage and quietly ends. It is about the length of a good nap. Many parents also keep it ready for the stroller and the car seat.

At the heart of this mix is Mozart and Brahms, played the calm, unhurried way a music box would play it. Rounded, warm and easy to recognize even half asleep. We did not try to reinvent these melodies. We took music that already works on tired children and simply gave it the gentlest possible treatment.

Bedtime is the obvious use, but families reach for this at other moments too. Nursery rooms, daycare quiet time, travel cots and unfamiliar hotel rooms all become easier with a steady sound. Wherever your child sleeps, a sound that stays exactly the same helps an unfamiliar place feel a bit more like home.

Grown ups get a lot out of this as well. The slow pace, the soft volume and the lack of interruptions calm a busy adult mind just as well as a toddler's. If you struggle to switch off at night, a long, steady lullaby with no surprises is a surprisingly good place to start.

The sound stays soft the whole way through. Nothing is bright, nothing is busy, and nothing ever races ahead of the calm pace. You can place a phone or tablet near the crib, turn it low, and trust that no moment in the next few hours will jolt your baby awake.

If you want this to work its best, make it part of a repeating routine. A lullaby played once is just background sound, but the same one played nightly becomes a habit the body knows. The melody stops being just music and becomes a cue your child's body reads without thinking.

Every track rests on classic lullaby melodies rather than generated background noise. We play them the unhurried way a music box would, rounding off every sharp edge. A familiar melody plus a calm tempo is a powerful pairing, because a child recognizes the shape of the tune even half asleep, and recognition itself is soothing.

The screen stays dark and gentle from start to finish. Nothing on screen is trying to hold attention or build toward a big moment. If your little one opens their eyes in the middle of the night, what they see helps them close them again instead of waking them up.

None of this is magic, it is just how a small nervous system responds to sound. A young nervous system tends to fall into step with what is around it, so a slow, steady sound invites slower breathing and a slower heartbeat. It gives the room one smooth, predictable sound instead of a dozen random ones.

We have spent years learning what a sleep video should sound and look like, and this is where that ended up. Try it tonight, and if your little one drifts off faster than usual, there are plenty more just like it waiting.

Questions parents ask

What age is this Mozart lullaby for?

There is no upper limit. We master the audio gently enough for a newborn's ears, while the character keeps toddlers and preschoolers interested in their bedtime routine. Keep the volume low for the youngest listeners.

How loud should I play it?

Keep it low. A good test is whether you can hold a normal conversation over it without raising your voice. If you can, the level is right. Loud lullabies tend to keep children awake instead of settling them, so when in doubt, turn it down rather than up.

Is it suitable for a newborn?

It works well for newborns as long as you keep it quiet. At that age the steady, unchanging sound is the important part, more than the melody or the picture. A flat, low lullaby helps cover household noise and gives a very young baby one calm, constant thing to rest against.

Is this Mozart lullaby free to watch?

Yes, everything on the channel is free. You can play it as often as you like, on any device, at no cost. If it becomes part of your routine, subscribing just makes it easier to find the same video again the next night.

Can I leave it playing all night?

This version runs for 2 hours, so it covers falling asleep rather than the whole night. If you want music until morning, the channel has the same style in 10, 16, 20 and 24 hour versions.

How to use this Spider-Man lullaby

  1. Start 15-30 minutes before bedtime. Play softly in the background as you read a book or finish the bath routine. The classical melody signals to your child’s brain that it’s time to wind down.
  2. Keep the screen out of reach or face down. The animation is calm, but a baby doesn’t need to look at it β€” the audio alone does the work.
  3. Pick a length that matches the night. 1-2 hour mixes are great for naps; 8-10 hours covers a full toddler night; 16-24 hours runs from bedtime through morning without ever cutting out.
  4. Volume: barely audible. A common mistake is playing lullabies too loud. Set it so you can just hear it from across the room β€” that’s the sweet spot.

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