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Sleep Music ♥ Mozart Brahms Lullaby ♫ Babies Fall Asleep Quickly After 1 Minute

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Tags: #SllepMusic #RelaxingMusic #SweetDreams #BedtimeMusic Ownership: All music and visuals in this video are original and fully owned by Sweet Dreams Songs For Kids. This content was created for entertainment and relaxation purposes, and is not affiliated with or endorsed by any third-party brands..

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 — Brahms, Mozart, Twinkle Twinkle — gently rearranged.

No harsh sounds

No sudden flashes, no loud effects — designed to soothe, never startle.

About this lullaby

Put it on at lights out and it keeps going for 3 hours and 1 minutes. Long enough that you will not be tiptoeing back in to press play again. Short enough that it is not still going at noon the next day. Long enough that you will not be tiptoeing back in to press play again. Short enough that it is not still going at noon the next day.

This video is built on Mozart and Brahms. Those melodies survived centuries of bedtimes because they do something to a sleepy mind, and we lean into that instead of dressing it up. The tune stays clear and familiar while the arrangement stays soft, slow and free of anything that might get in the way of sleep. The opening minutes carry most of the weight. The first melody is the softest in the whole video, chosen so a tired child tips over into sleep before the second track even starts. If your little one is already worn out and the room is dark, do not be surprised if they are gone within the first song.

Grown ups get a lot out of this as well. Plenty of grown ups leave it on for their own sleep, or for reading, studying and winding down after a hard day. If the whole house needs to come down a notch in the evening, this does the job for everyone in it.

Consistency is the quiet secret here. Same time, same order, every night. Within a week or two the first few notes start to work as a signal all by themselves.

We build these the way you would want a sleep aid for a baby to be built. No jump scares, no loud advert breaks inside the video, no sudden bright moments. It is simply a long, gentle lullaby with a soft scene to match.

Underneath everything is real classical music. We take melodies that already work, slow them down and let them repeat gently. Nothing here is trying to be clever or new, because tired children do not need clever, they need familiar and slow.

The picture follows the same rule as the sound, which is slow, dim and predictable. There are no flashes, no quick cuts and no bright color changes anywhere in the video. Children can glance at the scene as they drift off, and there is nothing there that rewards staying awake to watch.

There is a simple reason slow music helps small children sleep. Slow music encourages slow breathing, and slow breathing is most of what falling asleep actually feels like from the inside. It is the same quiet approach parents have used with soft singing for as long as there have been babies.

Sweet Dreams Songs has been making sleep videos for several years now. Every arrangement is played by hand, with no stock loops and no filler, and it shows in how calm the whole thing feels.

Questions parents ask

Is it suitable for a newborn?

Yes. The audio is soft and even, with no sudden sounds, which is exactly what a newborn needs. Keep the volume low and the screen out of direct view, and use the sound as gentle background while you feed, rock or settle your baby. Many parents of newborns use long videos like this so the sound carries through the whole sleep stretch.

Is this Mozart lullaby free to watch?

It is completely free. There is nothing to buy and nothing to sign up for. Just press play. The channel has many more lullabies in different lengths and with different characters, all free as well.

Can I leave it playing all night?

It plays for 3 hours and 1 minutes and then ends quietly. That suits children who only need help drifting off. For all night sound, pick one of our longer versions, they go up to 24 hours.

How fast do babies fall asleep to this Mozart lullaby?

Every child is different, but parents most often tell us between five and fifteen minutes when the video is part of a steady bedtime routine. The familiar opening melody becomes a cue, and after a week or two the body starts getting drowsy at the first notes.

How loud should I play it?

Quieter than you might think. Set it so you can just barely hear it from across the room. A lullaby works as a background signal rather than as something to actively listen to, and low playback is both safer for small ears and better at keeping a child asleep. If it feels almost too quiet for you, it is probably about right for your baby.

What age is this Mozart lullaby for?

From newborns to early school age. Babies respond to the steady quiet sound, toddlers respond to the familiar character, and older kids simply find it calming. Parents tell us they fall asleep to it too.

How to use this 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 — 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 — that’s the sweet spot.

More lullabies

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