My Favorite Background Music from Disney World & Beyond

Background music is one of the little things we love about Walt Disney World. We’ve been big fans of it for years, having procured a collection for the last 18 years. If you want a way to mentally transport yourself back to the parks or focus while working or studying, this list of our favorite area loops is for you.
Also known as area loops, background music (BGMs) is the music that plays–as the name suggests–in the background of different areas in the parks. Some of these loops are played in the entirety of large lands or pavilions, whereas others are only found in queues, post shows, or even restrooms. Others are completely extinct. Some were once thought lost, but recently recovered.
Background adds atmosphere to each land in the parks, yet is often overlooked. Disney’s best background music does a great job of setting the mood, but it’s not something ordinary guests actively give much attention. Very few people find themselves asking, “what’s this catchy tune? I’d love to rock out to this at home!” And that’s sort of the point–it exists in the background, being one of a veritable symphony of details all working in concert to make the Walt Disney World experience memorable.
While most guests don’t actively notice background music or want to rush home to download it, the converse is also true: average guests do notice if it were not there. Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge is Exhibit A here, as common complaints about the land are that it’s lacking in personality and doesn’t have the cinematic quality that it could with a soaring score.
Another example of this kind of approach is Mysterious Island at Tokyo DisneySea, which also doesn’t have a proper music loop, but does have a background soundscape. It’s eerie and ominous, perfectly befitting of the area, and its approach to BGM stands in sharp contrast with other nearby ports of call. You can feel the difference when going from Cape Cod or Mediterranean Harbor to Mysterious Island, and that makes guests appreciate the divergent approaches to background music in each even more.

Suffice to say, we’re big background music enthusiasts. We’ve been collecting Disney background music since 2007, first getting hooked on the official CD releases sold at Walt Disney World (like the Impressions de France score), then more obscure tracks (like the Star Tunnel music in Space Mountain), and then the actual area loops, starting with Tomorrowland and old school EPCOT Center.
We play this music regularly while working or trying to unwind. Its transportive, uplifting, and one of the best ways to experience Disney at home. It is also great for focusing, reducing distractions and working or studying. We’ve covered background music in a few different past posts here, but it’s been a while.
Back when we first started our background music collection, there were two sites that offered go-to resources for content that isn’t available via official releases: Mousebits.com and MagicMusic.net. These both still exist and are great tools. Two more are Passport2Dreams and E82: The EPCOT Legacy, both of which are run by passionate old school Walt Disney World fans who have gone to great lengths to research and resurrect long-lost elements of the parks.
However, a lot has changed since I got started down the BGM rabbit hole. Barriers to entry have been reduced, and music is available via Spotify playlists or on YouTube. I’ve included the link to anything that is not commercially available for purchase, and you can click on the name of each loop to open its full audio in a new tab.

Universe of Energy – Much of original EPCOT Center was destroyed—lost forever–or so we thought! It turns out there were copies of some of these loops in music libraries being watched over by old school Walt Disney World fans. The BGMs were saved, and with them our dreams of the future.
The restoration of the original Universe of Energy area music that played prior to the Ellen’s Energy Adventure reimagining was what prompted us to revisit this topic. I remember there being an exhaustive search for this, with some intrepid fans trying to piece together what was played from brief snippets of old home videos.
I don’t know how E82 did it, but this is a massive discovery. Listening to this transports me back in time–to my early days in the fandom searching for this to complete my collection, to those childhood visits to EPCOT Center, and to the days of the dinosaurs. It’s a great area loop, and was well worth the wait.
Innoventions — More than any other background music loop at Walt Disney World, this reminds me of the way EPCOT used to be with its 1990s synthesizer goodness that establishes an upbeat tone for your adventures in Future World.
Created by background music extraordinaire Russell Brower using the David Arkenstone piece “Papillon Day — On the Wings of a Butterfly” there are actually a few cuts of this loop. Losing this was one of the biggest blows of the EPCOT overhaul for me, and it’s under-discussed how the old BGM added so much charm and personality to the area.

Original Journey Into Imagination Area Music and Ride Audio – This one is different from the rest of the list because it features attraction dialogue and more than just atmospheric music. I’m able to put this on “in the background” and still focus on whatever I’m doing, but your mileage my vary. The bigger issue for me is that hearing this is more bittersweet than relaxing and uplifting.
EPCOT Center Main Entrance (1982) – I remember a decent amount from my visits to the “original” EPCOT Center (basically, the park up until around 1998) as a child. This background music is not one of those things. I would’ve heard it, but I wasn’t sufficiently perceptive of a kid to pick up on scores and themed music. Dinosaurs and dragons were more my jam.
However, the orchestral attraction themes of this original loop are imbued with the optimism of EPCOT Center, making this nonetheless like a trip down memory lane. Likewise, I think both the 2000 and 2006 updates have been in keeping with the spirit of EPCOT. I actually don’t dislike the current main entrance loop–it’s grown on me a lot. But admittedly, I also don’t feel the same sentimentality towards it (yet?).

The Land Area Music – Put this on and imagine sitting in a rocking chair on the front porch of the farmhouse in Living with the Land. For some reason, it reminds me of being back at home in Michigan, sitting outside on an early fall day.
Full Soarin’ Queue Loop – This soaring score is beautiful, uplifting, and truly embodies the spirit of Soarin. Even in normal times, that would be enough to earn it a spot on the list. Now, there’s something especially serene about the idea of hang-gliding over Malibu, Los Angeles, Yosemite, etc., feeling the wind on your face, and smelling those delightful scents!
The Living Seas Music Loop – Venture back in time to SeaBase Alpha with this loop, which is both soothing and inspiring. Want to vicariously live out your dream to become a marine biologist through your kid? Put this on while they learn to nudge them in the right direction!

Reflections of Earth Pre/Post-Show — Our #1 most-played Disney music by a wide margin is the pre and post-show score for IllumiNations. In the park, this created a convivial ‘festival’ atmosphere that actively commands the attention of guests, rather than fading into the background.
There were actually two versions of this; one for normal nights when the park closes, and other evenings when Extra Magic Hours began after IllumiNations. I love both, and use the regular track as high-energy motivation music. This is right up there for me with Fountain of Nations (also one of my most-played holiday loops) and the aforementioned Innoventions loop as the biggest losses of the EPCOT overhaul.
Japan (EPCOT) – They say that classical music has a positive impact on brain power, concentration, and memory. I certainly hope that extends to classical background music used in Walt Disney World, and listened to while reading essays on theme parks.
The loop consists primarily of traditional Japanese folk music, with a lot of pieces featuring the koto (a stringed instrument). This is actually one of several World Showcase loops I really like, with Norway and France being two other big favorites.

Tomorrowland (1989) – This is one of two versions of the Tomorrowland loop that make the list, and a third (1983-1989) comes pretty close. (Despite the labeling, this loop is likely from 1990–see The New Age Music of Tomorrowland, and Others on Passport2Dreams.)
This is features a variety of soothing and upbeat New Age music, and I most often put this on (no joke) when I need help falling asleep.
Tomorrowland (2003/Current) – This loop reminds me of nights spent riding the Tomorrowland Transit Authority PeopleMover while gazing at the neon marquees. I also love its self-referential, atmospheric quality.
This background music contains music from Carousel of Progress, Adventures through Inner Space, Alien Encounter, and other attractions. Rather than presenting these as a generic medley like is done at the park entrance, these versions have a billowy sound evoking a sci fi vibe.
Space Mountain Queue (Walt Disney World) – One of my most strongly-held “unpopular opinions” is that Magic Kingdom has the best version of Space Mountain. The Star Tunnel music is one huge reason why. (Plus the queue, load area, and post show.)

Main Street Background Music (WDW, DLR & DLP) – The most recent version of the Main Street BGM, which was updated in 2012 to add “Married Life” from Pixar’s Up, plus over a dozen new tunes, arranged and recorded specifically for Main Street, U.S.A., will join many of the existing songs.
We spend more time on Main Street than any other land, this evokes powerful and scattered bits of nostalgia as it plays in the background. Some days, I’ll remember a recent rope drop run; other times, Extra Magic Hours from a decade ago. Then there are all those late nights we’ve spent closing out the parks since 2006.
Walt Disney Studios Park Nighttime Entrance – I’ve joked that the best thing about Walt Disney Studios Park/Disney Adventure World, or whatever you want to call the second gate at Disneyland Paris, is this background loop. Perhaps that’s not strictly true, but it’s easily top 10. Probably top 5. This background music features soaring, cinematic scores and themes from some of the most iconic films of all-time. The transitions are brilliant, and this hour-plus loop is at once relaxing and uplifting.
Pandora: World of Avatar Atmospheric Music (Animal Kingdom) – Like the land itself, this orchestral atmospheric music is cinematic and soaring, and feels like something out of a blockbuster film. At the same time, it’s incredibly relaxing and reminds me of late nights spent soaking up the ambiance in Pandora. If I close my eyes, I can almost see the bioluminescence…which I guess is good, since the actual paint has faded over the years.

Sunshine Plaza Playlist (Disney’s California Adventure) – While Sunshine Plaza was a pretty poor representation of California, this background music was its high point. This curated list of the songs that best exemplify CA is great for cruisin’ down PCH, hiking in Griffith Park, watching sunset at Santa Monica Pier…or sitting at home.
Buena Vista Street Background Music (Disney California Adventure) – The music that replaced the Sunshine Plaza playlist is also pretty good–just decidedly different.
New Orleans Square/Rivers of America (Disneyland) – This is the music played along the Rivers of America waterfront (basically, the Fantasmic seating area) in New Orleans Square. It’s a great mix of Dixieland Jazz.
Disneyland Esplanade Area Music – The ultimate curated playlist of movie and attraction music that embodies a day at Disneyland. From the Fantasmic exit music to Winnie the Pooh, this background music has some incredible range and is one of our absolute favorites.
Grizzly Peak Airfield (Disney California Adventure) – Also known as the Grand Californian Hotel California Adventure Entrance Loop, this music plays in Grizzly Peak and its Airfield (formerly Condor Flats) at DCA. Similar to the WDSP Nighttime Loop, this has a cinematic quality to it due to the film scores used.
It also has an “epic outdoors” and soaring vibe. We’ve used this for road trips through Sequoia, Kings Canyon, and Yosemite National Parks, so I associate it with those places as much as Disney California Adventure at this point.

Cape Cod (Tokyo DisneySea & Beyond) – Soothing seaside sounds from Duffy’s hometown at Tokyo DisneySea. You should also recognize this music if you spend a lot of time upstairs at Columbia Harbour House in Walt Disney World. (I love the Christmas BGM even more, but that’s sadly not available online, at least not to my knowledge.)
Port Discovery (Tokyo DisneySea & Beyond) – More soothing seaside sounds, but with imbued with more futurism and optimism…which shouldn’t be surprising since a lot of this loop is ported over from EPCOT Center.
Mediterranean Harbor Porto Paradiso Music (Tokyo DisneySea) – We’ve only stayed at Hotel MiraCosta once, but when we did, we left our room’s windows cracked all night so this delightful background music would wake us up in the morning. This reminds me of that and rope dropping Tokyo DisneySea, my favorite theme park in the world.

Aquasphere Plaza ~ Night (Tokyo DisneySea) – At the end of my very first night in Tokyo DisneySea, I made a recording of this music on my phone. I wanted to have something to “take me back” to that evening whenever I listened to it. Little did I realize that an entire CD is sold of Aquasphere Plaza music, which not-so-coincidentally became one of my very first purchases at Tokyo Disney Resort a day later.
Even years later, I’m instantly transported back to the end of that first night in Tokyo DisneySea every single time I listen to this. It was such a little thing at the time, but it was the culmination of one of my best days ever in a Disney theme park, and this music is my most distinct memory from that first visit to Tokyo DisneySea.
Arabian Coast (Tokyo DisneySea) – In this one port of call at Tokyo DisneySea, there are at least 3 background loops in Arabian Coast: this one covering the majority of the land, plus separate loops for inside Casbah Food Court and one for the queue of Sindbad’s Storybook Voyage. They all have similar arrangements, and are each pretty strong.
For this main loop, someone finally found a use for the direct-to-video Aladdin and the King of Thieves, as most of the music is pulled from that. My favorite of these loops is actually the Sindbad’s Storybook Voyage queue loop, but this makes the cut over that because I found the Arabian Coast loop first. All of them get me hyped to sail around the world with my trusty tiger sidekick to party with monkeys, surf a whale, jam with a genie, or engage in various other adventures. Or, sit at my computer and type posts like this, as one does.
Planning a Walt Disney World trip? Learn about hotels on our Walt Disney World Hotels Reviews page. For where to eat, read our Walt Disney World Restaurant Reviews. To save money on tickets or determine which type to buy, read our Tips for Saving Money on Walt Disney World Tickets post. Our What to Pack for Disney Trips post takes a unique look at clever items to take. For what to do and when to do it, our Walt Disney World Ride Guides will help. For comprehensive advice, the best place to start is our Walt Disney World Trip Planning Guide for everything you need to know!
YOUR THOUGHTS
Are you a fan of background music from Walt Disney World or beyond? Which BGMs are your favorites? Any area loops that are particularly effective at helping you focus on work or studying? Any of these that you love or hate? Newer BGMs from the last few years that you love (or hate)? Do you agree or disagree with our list of favorites? Any questions we can help you answer? Hearing feedback about your experiences is both interesting to us and helpful to other readers, so please share your thoughts below in the comments!

Wonderful,post! I always listen to Disney background music….Main Street or Main Street Christmas or Epcot while I grade my big stacks of college final exams. When students come by and notice I’m playing Disney, I ask if they want me in my happy place while I’m grading their finals and calculating their final grades. And they smile and enjoy my Disney tunes!
What a great topic. I thought I might be one of the only ones that actually was attached to some of this music. Two attraction themes actually bring tears to my eyes – The current Soarin’ queue music, and the theme that plays outside of Spaceship Earth. There are others, I am sure. I actually have a CD that has much of the music on it, from many of the attractions. Where would we ever hear the music from Splash Mountain again.. I bought the CD on Amazon several years ago.
My favorite place to get my background music and loops fix is D-Cot, I listen to it all day every day at work. I’m currently listening to the Illuminations Preshow Music <3
Is it possible to download the loop from Wilderness Lodge. I would love to listen to it at home. It always relaxes me when we’re there.
The brilliance of EPCOT background music is how many times they’ve got it right; the 1990s- and 2000s scores of Bruce Broughton can work just as well as the original music. I particularly recommend the outdoor loop for The Living Seas (Seabase Alpha version is good, but the outside music is so *soothing.*) and the Hollywood Hotel queue background music, particularly on a misty mysterious morning.
My favorite commercially issued background music (not attraction or spectacular) has to be the B-side to The Country Bear Jamboree album; those tracks got used all around Frontierland in the 1970s and 1980s, but I believe some would make it into the Bricker Era.
I still remember the Innoventions bathroom was the best place to hear one of the main Future World loops. Most ridiculously, some of it got remade for that new version of Disneyland Tomorrowland that never came and that track was “hidden” in one of those DL Tomorrowland bathrooms.
And of course, nothing gets me fired up for an early morning of efficient park touring like when the Wilderness Lodge track hits the main theme from “The Magnificent Seven.”
That Innoventions bathroom was a step back in time. Just reading this made me imagine the smell the Zep-O-Zorb stocked there and hear the wonderfully 80s loop you’re referencing.
Thank you for this one, Tom. Have loved the BGM for Magic Kingdom since the early days. Kudos.
Great article/topic. The Tree of Life area music is also excellent and relaxing. A hidden gem is the Columbia Harbour House loop if you’re feeling salty. I also listen to the Fort Wilderness loops while in my campsite, spot on theming. Don’t forget all the resort loops and the Resort TV!
Frontierland. Hearing the bango music and I’m transported back to my CM days standing on the Country Bear porch or the dock for TSI.
https://youtu.be/4IWDQN7jej4?si=YSw_MrTOoR7fF8hF
My favorite loops tend to be resort loops. My all-time list is:
1. Trader Sam’s Grog Grotto (this tiki inspired surf music is glorius)
2. Animal Kingdom Lodge Christmas loop (Toyemba Noel is an earworm that is so so good)
3. Coronado Springs (the Spanish guitars are *chef’s kiss*)
4. Nomad Lounge (the African and Indian inspired pieces are forever tied to the coolest lounge in any park)
5. Living with the Land (That song is a banger. Period. But the entire attraction audio is my comfort loop)
Thanks for these links, particularly the Tokyo ones that are harder to find. Personal favorites of mine are the Illuminations pre/post-show music and the 1982 Epcot Center entrance music. We had that on a cassette tape growing up and listened to it all the time. A fwe of these are unfamiliar to me and I look forward to listening to them. BTW, the line “Much of original EPCOT Center was destroyed—lost forever–or so we thought! It turns out there were copies of some of these loops in music libraries being watched over by old school Walt Disney World fans. The BGMs were saved, and with them our dreams of the future.” was great!
Bookmarked! Thanks for the additional links to what is often on at work for me.
We don’t go to the parks on the first day we arrive, so coming down the escalator from the Lime garage and hearing the Disney Springs BGM always triggers the “We’re
back!” vibe.
Disney Springs BGM is so soothing and great for “busy work” days at my desk. One of my favs.
Great post, thanks for this!
I think about the Reflections Of Earth post-show music unreasonably often. I remember how wonderful it felt to slowly meander out of Workd Showcase at the end of the night. I think if the post-show music had stayed the same, I might judge Luminous more favorably than I do now.
One of my favorite memories from my College Program was walking back to the fountain after doing crowd control for illuminations singing very dramatically to ‘We Go On’ with my friends
I have one of Disneyland Paris – it has some notable variations ! On of my favorite is the music mix in the Casey junior queue.
Coincidental that you should do this article now, because I recently called up a handful of BGM loops on YouTube. First I wanted to revisit the Canada loop. It’s still current. Besides liking hearing 3 different Gordon Lightfoot tunes, there’s this one song I can’t identify that’s really beautiful. It’s towards the end of the cycle on the half hour YouTube video. I’m thinking maybe it’s leftover incidental music from the original 360 degree movie that played in the early days of Epcot.
Easy listening instrumentals are my favorite genre. A couple of days ago, I wanted to listen to some, but not my everyday Amazon Music playlist that I had curated. I had recently discovered an album on Amazon Music of Brazilian bossa nova tunes done by Japanese musicians & that got me to thinking I was in the mood for easy instrumentals with a distinctively Asian sound. So first I played a China pavilion BGM loop, & later a Japan pavilion one. I think these were both older. Like the China one didn’t have tunes from Mulan in it.
I looked up the original Epcot entrance music around that time, hoping for a blast of nostalgia. Though I didn’t remember as much of it as I hoped, I recognized the classic lineup of attractions being referred to.
Then, veering away from Disney, I was hoping to find the old front of the park BGM from Universal Studios. It was pretty corny because you kept hearing dialogue interspersed with the music (“You mean to tell me you built a time machine??!!!”). That would indeed be nostalgic as the early days of Universal Studios before they started replacing the original lineup of attractions & before Islands of Adventure & the massive parking garages were heady times for me. But alas, that was one thing I couldn’t find on YouTube.
I’m so glad YouTube features complete footage of a bunch of old rides, shows, & parades. I’ve also recently taken time to revisit my favorite version of Fantasmic (complete with extended Pocahontas sequence!) & view other nighttime spectaculars. Since I’m currently without a pass, it’s like getting my theme park experience at home without all the walking & dealing with weather & long queues & big crowds.
Great lists. Others that transport me immediately to my happy places: Nomad Lounge, Disneyland Frontierland, Jungle Cruise (with or without Albert AWOL), and International Gateway. If you’re really into some super cheesy Disney Musak, the Disney Springs loop does the trick.
I love a great BGM loop, but it really bothers me that people think SWGE is lame because it doesn’t have one. The soundscape in SWGE is very immersive, and it makes the moments that do have music (entering the land, the attractions, Kylo’s entrance, and Savi’s) all the more powerful. The fact that all other music is diegetic makes it feel more real. Star Wars has a history of amazing sounds, and the land features so many of them.
Also, I see your Epcot bias shines through in this list. It’s ok. I share that bias. 😛
I take my morning walk to the Epcot Future World music, 3 miles on a 20 minute loop. It has always been my favorite. Going to add Illuminations to the mix this week. Thanks so much for the links!!
Standing in line for Soarin’ and listening to the background music and realizing that the theme to BSG was playing as part of the loop. I freaked out. No one around me had any clue what I was talking about.
It’s the Last Starfighter theme in that loop that gets me every single time.
THANK YOU for the updated list! The Disney BGM’s are so incredibly transportive, and I too have some very vivid memories linked to (and activated by) hearing the music from around the resort. The strongest one is undoubtedly the Space Mountain Star Tunnel music. Hearing even a few seconds of it gives me a chill, probably triggered by memories of back when Disney really had the AC cranked inside Space Mountain.
I appreciate finding out about more than just the ones I grew up with or have already sought out. There was a time when everything at Disney had music associated with it, and even the background tracks I don’t remember (or disappeared before my early visits) are often quite good at evoking the feel of being there.