
There is a version of the sync licensing conversation that never quite tells you the full story. It goes something like this: make great music, register with your PRO, submit to a library, and wait. That is not wrong, exactly. But it leaves out most of what actually matters to the people on the other side of the desk.
Music supervisors are not passive listeners browsing a catalogue with unlimited time and patience. They are working against tight deadlines, juggling creative demands from directors and producers, managing budgets, and navigating rights clearances that can collapse a deal in 48 hours. Understanding what they actually need, as opposed to what we imagine they need, is where Canadian songwriters and composers can gain a real advantage.
The question they are asking before they press play
Before a music supervisor evaluates a single note of your track, they are already asking a practical question: can this be cleared in time? A music supervisor working on a television episode may have only 48 hours to clear a track before the episode airs. That timeline reshapes everything about how they approach a catalogue.
This is why one-stop clearance has become one of the most talked-about concepts in sync. One-stop clearance, where you own and control both master and publishing, is strongly preferred. It removes a major friction point in production timelines. Supervisors regularly pass on music they love because the rights are too complex to clear in time.
For independent Canadian artists, this is actually a significant competitive advantage. Independent artists who own both rights are called one-stop, and that status has become a competitive advantage. Major label releases often involve multiple parties, each with their own legal teams and approval timelines. An indie artist who controls their own master and publishing can move faster than a label release with three parties to consult.
Patrick Curley, President and General Counsel at Third Side Music, a Montreal-based music publishing company that manages a catalogue of more than 40,000 works, notes that his company prepares lists for music supervisors working on specific productions, which means the relationship between publisher and supervisor is an ongoing, proactive one, not simply reactive.
Emotional clarity above everything
Once the rights question is answered, supervisors turn to the creative question, and here the conversation in the industry has shifted notably in recent years.
It used to be that the safest, most neutral track often won the placement. In 2025, music supervisors are reaching for songs that bring texture, grit, and a clear emotional tone. The era of placeholder music, of tracks that were inoffensive enough to disappear into the background of a scene, is giving way to something more direct. Shows like The Bear and Euphoria have set a new expectation: music in a scene should carry emotional weight, not just fill sonic space.
Music supervisors look for tracks with emotional clarity, meaning each song conveys a distinct and identifiable mood, along with strong structure, including a clear intro, build, climax, and resolution. That last point matters more than many songwriters realize. A track that meanders through its own arrangement is a problem for an editor trying to cut to picture. Music that knows where it is going helps everyone do their job.
The lyrical dimension has also become more specific. The kinds of lyrical themes that are working best are focused on transformation, perseverance, and emotional breakthrough. These themes are universal, and they resonate in everything from TV dramas to commercials for wellness apps or travel companies.
The first ten seconds are not a formality
The first five to ten seconds are critical. With the rise of short-form content and the general acceleration of content consumption, music must establish its mood within the opening seconds. A slow build that takes 30 seconds to arrive at its emotional center is a liability in a world where supervisors are filtering hundreds of submissions and editors are cutting scenes that open on action.
This is a structural issue worth taking seriously at the writing and arrangement stage, not just at submission. If your track’s identity does not arrive early, it may never arrive at all, at least not in anyone’s search queue.
Metadata is not optional. It is your pitch.
One of the most consistent themes among sync professionals in the current market is the growing importance of metadata, and it goes well beyond simply filing the correct ISRC codes, though that remains essential. Metadata stopped being optional. If your track did not clearly communicate mood, energy, and use case within seconds, it often never got played at all. Artists who consistently landed placements were the ones who presented their music clearly. Their titles made sense. Their descriptions matched what the song actually did. Their tags reflected how editors search, not how musicians talk about music.
The distinction in that last sentence is worth sitting with. Musicians describe their work in terms of influences, genre, process, and feeling. Editors search in terms of function: “quiet tension building to release,” “upbeat indie feel for a road trip montage,” “melancholy piano for a scene of loss.” An estimated 65% of music supervisors are expected to use AI-powered search tools by 2026, enabling semantic searches like “find me a hopeful piano track that builds from quiet contemplation to joyful resolution in under three minutes.” The way you tag your work determines whether it surfaces in those searches at all.
The deliverables supervisors actually need
Having a great recording is necessary. Having the right versions of that recording is what gets a placement across the finish line.
Stems availability is increasingly expected. Without stems, a supervisor cannot reshape the music around dialogue or timing. This is a practical reality of how music gets used in picture: a vocal may need to drop out during a line of dialogue, a beat may need to be extended to match a cut. Providing stems is not just a courtesy; it is increasingly a baseline expectation.
Beyond stems, it is wise to prepare alternate versions of each track in advance: an instrumental version, a vocal-only or stripped version, and even a clean edit if the song has explicit lyrics. These versions make music more flexible for different scenes, and instrumental cues are often needed.
On the technical side, a mix must be clean, balanced, and free of clipping, distortion, or artifacts. Music supervisors listen on studio monitors and high-quality headphones, and every imperfection is audible. This is not a note about loudness or trends in mastering. It is a straightforward professional standard.
The relationship matters as much as the submission
The mechanics of sync, the metadata, the stems, the clean mixes, the one-stop status, are all table stakes. They get you into the conversation. What keeps you in the conversation is something harder to systematize.
The artists who earn consistently in sync are not necessarily the most prolific or the most decorated. They are the ones who treat the whole enterprise as a long-term creative and professional relationship, not a lottery. They build catalogues with intention. They tag their work the way editors think, not the way musicians talk. They deliver the right files the first time. And they make music that knows what it wants to say before the picture even arrives.
That last part is the one no checklist can manufacture. But everything else is learnable, and for Canadian songwriters and composers, the infrastructure to do it right, through SOCAN’s sync and AV Post-Sync collection, through independent publishing control, through the growing international appetite for sounds that do not originate in Los Angeles, is already in place.
The supervisors are looking. The question is whether your music is ready to be found.

