How do Music Supervisors like Scott Vener (pictured above) find music for the TV shows they supervise? Check out the article from Hypebot below:
Andrea von Foerster, who places a great deal of music in movies, says that she has no system but clearly has some habits including checking her inbox for over a thousand daily emails:
“I listen to everything that comes my way, and sometime it can even be a year later, but I’ve placed songs that I’ve heard a year later, so, it’s never too late for me to hear something, because you really only need the right project for it. I’ve definitely worked on things where people are like, this is out right now, you should listen to this, but I don’t have a place for it. Maybe six months later I’ve got the perfect place for it. So, you never really know what you’re gonna get. And, it’s still kind of frustrating, because in film, you don’t really get the chance to use something right away. You’ll be on a film for a year to two years, so, in the meantime, you have to worry about TV or ads or trailers playing something before it can be in your movie….”
More“Everything is about finding something within the time limit and price that you have. For the most part, I’m not really on the hipster blogs that everyone talks about. I don’t care what other people’s opinions of music are, because it might not fit their ears, but it fits my project. I do actually watch endless videos on YouTube at like four in the morning, and I’ll just go from one thread to another to another to another. Having a British music background, I tend to watch as many British music videos as possible and find new artists that way.”
Ann Kline, music director for the Showtime series Shameless, that features up to thirty songs per episode, is mostly focused on indie rock:
“There are so many indie bands out there that are accessible through the Internet and so many licensing companies that gather them and help you weed through what’s appropriate for your show. I have a lot of great contacts but we definitely go out to independent companies almost exclusively. It’s rare that we use any stuff from a major label. So we find it all over. Even when we were first gathering music for the show, I would call clubs in Chicago and ask for some of their favorite indie bands to kind of get that vibe.”
Lindsay Wolfington, who supervises music for One Tree Hill, describes how she finds music in relationship to the process of picking it for a particular script:
“When I get the script, I read it and mark scenes where I think a song will go – sometimes it’s obvious because we are in a bar, other times it’s an emotional moment that I think we’ll want to score with a song. Then I break down all the scenes in a spreadsheet, divvy up where we will spend our money (because we can’t use big artists in every spot, hence our search for great indie artists!), and then put my headphones on. I go through new albums I’ve received from major labels, publishers and companies who represent indie artists. And then I also browse through folders I have been filtering music into. I have folders in my iTunes for mellow music, for dramatic “what’s going to happen” moments, and then upbeat and quirky songs.”
“I send my suggestions (2-3 songs per spot, usually 3-4 for the coda) to the editor cutting that episode and they temp them in. Then as the episodes become polished, we revise music accordingly. Sometimes the scene reads completely different in the script than it does on-camera, so I just put on my headphones again and find better choices!
Note that these supervisors mention music they receive from labels and from companies that represent artists for licensing as well as music they find on the web. They also employ personal approaches, such as Ann Kline calling clubs in Chicago. In the process they consider a great deal of music and turn down a huge amount of music that they like or that other people like simply because it doesn’t fit the project.
So it’s not just a matter of making good music, whatever the heck that really means, but of being discoverable via the multiple channels that music supervisors employ. For an unsigned indie artist, that includes being on YouTube and other web outlets as well as utilizing the increasing range of companies that exist to get your music in front of music supervisors.