NEW YORK, NY.- David James Rosens work has been streamed on YouTube hundreds of millions of times. Hes played a crucial role in some of pop cultures biggest recent moments. But few people outside the space where the entertainment and marketing industries overlap know his name.
As a composer, Rosen is at the forefront of the trailerization movement: Hes in demand for his ability to rework existing songs to maximize their impact in trailers for films and TV shows.
He married vocals and motifs from Kate Bushs Running Up That Hill to a thunderous version of the Stranger Things theme in the lead-up to the second volume of the shows fourth season. He intertwined Nigerian singer Tems cover of No Woman No Cry with Kendrick Lamars Alright in the teaser for Black Panther: Wakanda Forever, symbolizing the meeting of the franchises future and its legacy. He put a sinister singe on Taylor Swifts Its Nice to Have a Friend for the diabolical doll thriller M3GAN. He added cosmic drama to Elton Johns classic rock staple Goodbye Yellow Brick Road for the upcoming Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania.
As potential viewers are inundated with an ever-growing number of options, studios have limited chances to build anticipation for their projects. At the same time, technological advances have made it easier than ever for products to stand out. People want their film to have its own identity, Rosen said in an interview at a Los Angeles coffee shop. The genies out of the bottle as far as the limitless ability to customize something for your film. Clients, studios, agencies, whatever, they all know that and like to take advantage of it.
Rosen spent his 20s playing guitar in the New Jersey band the Parlor Mob. After moving to LA in 2014, he got a job as the in-house composer at a trailer house the specialized production companies behind these promos. Three years later, he co-founded Totem, a music library that creates custom tracks for trailers. Much of Rosens output is original compositions, but the ones that get the most attention are his overhauls.
Almost never does a song just drop into a trailer and work, he said. Maybe it needs to feel more epic or more emotional, or maybe it needs to feel subtler with things pulled away.
Trailerization is a relatively new term and the distinctions within it are malleable. There are reimaginations, which are usually instrumental covers by composers. There are overlays, where elements are added to a song in varying degrees. Then there are remixes, where the source material is distinctly altered, often to shift the context.
Some distinguish between remixes and overlays by what the composer has to play with. If theres a full set of stems the separated digital parts that comprise a song its a remix. If stems arent available, its an overlay.
Occasionally composers will be asked to create invisible overlays, where they make adjustments that are imperceptible to most listeners but nudge a song toward a more wide-screen sound.
The trailerization process is now so common that even when a trailer uses the films original score, it too will be adjusted. Trailers are a mini version of the movie, said Cato, the one-named composer whose credits include performing a system update on Vangelis for the Blade Runner 2049 trailer and giving Guns N Roses an anguished-turned-pulverizing remix for Jason Momoas Netflix revenge film Sweet Girl.
You have to suck people into the theater and tell a story in 2 1/2 minutes, Cato added. That is so intense and builds so quickly that most music written for the actual movie will be way too long and drawn out.
In the past, trailers often relied on the scores of previously released films, but that practice has basically become verboten. Starting in the late 1970s, composer John Beal pioneered original scores for trailers, but that required a recording studio full of musicians, making it a costly, resource-heavy endeavor. Today, with developments in software, its easier than ever to simulate those sounds.
I could sit at my computer at home and you wouldnt know that there wasnt a 100-piece orchestra there, Rosen said. You couldnt do that 10 years ago.
MANY POINT TO the trailer for The Social Network, from 2010 which featured a Belgian womens choir singing Radioheads Creep as the origin of what became the trailerization trend. Its success incited a deluge of trailers using slow and sad covers of well-known songs, usually featuring female vocalists. Recent examples include Liza Annes version of Dreams by the Cranberries for Aftersun and Bellsaints interpretation of R.E.M.s Losing My Religion for the second season of the Chucky TV series.
Sanaz Lavaedian, the senior vice president of music for the trailer house Mocean, said that when she entered the industry in 2011, there was still a lot of resistance from artists who didnt want their music used for commercial purposes. Covers provided a workaround. Now, as more musicians are struggling to make a living, theyre often more open to trailers not just using their music but modifying it.
There were so many bands that didnt think licensing was cool, so they never let us do it, Lavaedian said. Now theyre like, Oh, were going to make half a million dollars on this? Never mind.
Many high profile trailerizations are applied to songs that are decades old: Remixes and overlays allow the trailers to tap into the nostalgia evoked by the original. If we were able to remix an Elton John song or a Beatles song, these are iconic artists, Lavaedian said. The second you hear their voice, you know who it is, and theres a lot of weight in that. More weight than if it were a cover.
Composer Bryce Millers big breakthrough came in 2019 with the Godzilla: King of the Monsters trailer, which featured his custom orchestral rendition of Somewhere Over the Rainbow atop images of kaiju carnage. His subsequent credits include a modernization of Blondies Heart of Glass for House of Gucci, an orchestral blend of the Rolling Stones Paint It Black and the Addams Family Theme for Wednesday and a haunting overlay for Nirvanas Something in the Way in The Batman trailer.
As soon as I can get rid of dated-sounding guitars and drums, I can build a more contemporary production that is pulling from more pop music sounds, Miller said. Older recordings sonically are a little thin and lack the heft that so many contemporary songs have.
Unique remixes began appearing in trailers going back to the mid-2010s, but it wasnt until the one for Jordan Peeles 2019 film Us that studios and audiences began to really take notice. In the fresh interpretation, with its piercing strings and moody atmospherics, a celebratory weed rap by the Oakland duo Luniz became deeply unsettling.
Every once in a while we get one of those game-changer trailers, Lavaedian said. The Us trailer is taking a song and deconstructing it down to its bones and then constructing it again to do what that film needed it to do. It was kind of groundbreaking.
MARK WOOLEN, THE founder of the trailer house Mark Woolen & Associates, specializes in award-season films and was responsible for that transformative Social Network trailer. New York magazine once called him the uncontested auteur of the trailer era.
In a phone interview, Woolen noted that in contemporary trailers, omniscient narration has largely disappeared (that means no more hackneyed In a world
setups) and theres less dialogue from the film. Trailers can be more impressionistic and elliptical in their storytelling, he said. Its more about creating a feeling in a lot of the work.
As a result, the trailers soundtrack has become increasingly crucial. Music is sometimes 80 to 90% of the process to us, Woolen said. Its trying to cast that right piece of music thats going to inspire and dictate rhythm and set tone and inform character and story, and hopefully make an impression.
For Amazons recent love triangle My Policeman, Woolen used Cat Powers Sea of Love, which has become a romantic favorite among aging millennials. Though Cat Powers original interpretation was stripped down to just singer Chan Marshalls voice and strums on an autoharp, Woolen had a composer overlay swelling strings as the drama became more fraught.
Beyond providing the vibes, a song is often selected for a trailer because the lyrics convey the films narrative themes. Woolen didnt just select Sea of Love because it is mysterious and seductive. He was equally guided by the refrain I want to tell you how much I love you and the ambiguousness of who that you might be.
In Marvels The Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania trailer, as the heroes realize the size of the predicament theyve gotten themselves into, the sound design emphasizes Elton John singing, I should have stayed on the farm / I should have listened to my old man.
Deciding which song a trailer uses and how its employed can involve studio marketing executives, the filmmakers, the team at the trailer house and the composer. A trailers creation can take years and is often covered by restrictive nondisclosure agreements, preventing the people behind it from discussing the details of making it, even after it has been released.
Because the material is so protected, the musicians rarely see the images that will be included in the trailer. Instead they have to rely on a music supervisor or creative director at a trailer house to guide them through inception and multiple rounds of revisions. Were literally dealing with billions of dollars in unreleased assets, Lavaedian said of the footage from the films. Theres no way we can send that to a composer.
UNLESS YOU KNOW where to look on the internet, the pieces made by trailer composers are largely uncredited, and sometimes contractually so. Trailerizations are created to live exclusively in the trailer, Rosen said. They serve as a piece of marketing.
But that may be changing.
When the agency Trailer Park approached Miller about doing a trailerization for the first volume of the fourth season of Stranger Things, he was told the general plot and tone of the episodes. Hed long wanted to do something with Journeys Separate Ways (Worlds Apart) and it turned out the song was on the agencys shortlist as well.
After spending months on his ominous remix, it made it to the final stages of the approval process where the original musicians had to sign off. Steve Perry, the songs singer, loved it and came to Millers studio to help construct an extended remix. Then he got Netflix to release both versions on the official soundtrack, with Millers name attached.
Miller called Perry inspiring and a joy to work with. Hes also like a runaway train. As soon as we finished Stranger Things, hes like, What are we doing next? The pair collaborated again on a trailerization of Journeys Any Way You Want It for the Hulu series Welcome to Chippendales.
Where will trailerization at large head next? Recently, theres been an interest in 1990s alternative rock hits, with remixes of Spacehog and the Toadies appearing in trailers for Guardian of the Galaxy Volume 3 and The Midnight Club. In the promo for Babylon, the team of composers known as Superhuman created a Jazz Age-influenced interpretation of David Bowies Fame thats almost as nutty as the film itself.
With decades of material to work with, Rosen hopes the trend continues. Theres more opportunity for creativity from me and other people, he said. I view it as a new life for a lot of these artists songs.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.