What Is the Name of the Song in the Skyrizi Commercial?
Uncovering the catchy jingle behind the Skyrizi campaign
(By Carmichael Phillip)
Introduction: That Tune You Can’t Get Out of Your Head
If you’ve seen the Skyrizi commercial on TV or streaming, you’ve likely found yourself humming the background music afterward. The upbeat, nearly insistent jingle drives home the message of the ad: improved skin = freedom = living in the moment. Many viewers ask, “What’s the name of that song?” In this article, we’ll dig into the details: what we know about the song, what remains unclear, how the versions vary, and why commercial jingles like this one often have shrouded identities.
The Name of the Song: “Nothing Is Everything”
After digging through multiple sources, the song used in many of the Skyrizi commercials is titled Nothing Is Everything. Drugs.com confirms that the song “Nothing Is Everything” is the one featured in the campaign for Skyrizi (the ad for plaque psoriasis).
Further, the article on Looper states that “Nothing Is Everything (Skyrizi Theme)” is a specially-made jingle created for the ad campaign, and that multiple musical versions exist (country, rock, R&B) under the same phrase.
Looper
So yes—the song name is “Nothing Is Everything.”
Who Performed It? The Mystery Behind the Singer
Although we have the song’s title, identifying the singer or the full performer credits is more difficult:
Drugs.com states that the song “was written and developed by a third-party for the Skyrizi commercial and so was the singer.”
The Looper article notes that the original “Nothing Is Everything” jingle has no publicly credited performers, implying the production house used session singers and didn’t release mainstream credit.
Looper
There are variations and covers: for instance, the lounge/lounge-cover artist Richard Cheese & Lounge Against the Machine released a version titled “Nothing Is Everything (Skyrizi Theme)”.
Because of this, there is no widely-known, officially released name of the singer fronting the primary commercial version. The brand appears to have used proprietary music made for the campaign, rather than licensing an existing pop song or public artist.
Why So Many Versions? Variants of the Jingle Across Spots
One interesting feature about “Nothing Is Everything” is that it appears in multiple versions across different spots for Skyrizi. For example:
As noted on Reddit, viewers have encountered country-style, R&B style, lounge style, and rock-style renditions of the jingle.
The Looper article describes how AbbVie created several versions of the tune—allowing the same brand message (“Nothing is everything”) to be tailored to different visual settings or demographics.
Looper
As a result, you might hear the same lyrics, but the instrumentation, tempo and vocal style vary from one commercial cut to another.
This approach makes sense: using a flexible jingle lets the brand maintain consistency while adapting to different markets or variants (e.g., psoriasis vs Crohn’s disease) without needing new licensing every time.
How to Find the Specific Version You Heard
If you’re trying to locate exactly the version you heard (the tempo, vocal tone or instrumentation you remember), here are some steps:
Identify the commercial cut. Use sites like iSpot.tv to find the exact spot — e.g., “Skyrizi – Little Things: Pool” or “Skyrizi – In the Picture.”
Compare visual audio with YouTube clips. Once you know the cut, find the YouTube upload of that version and listen for the intro or instrumentation variations (guitar vs piano, lounge vs pop).
Check soundtrack-only uploads. Sometimes fans upload the jingle by itself (e.g., “Nothing Is Everything (Demo)”). For example, one YouTube upload “Nothing Is Everything (Demo)” claims to isolate the track.
Search for composer/production credits. Occasionally, industry music-supervision publications or film/commercial databases list the composer or production house behind the jingle.
Use a music-identification app. You could try apps like Shazam or SoundHound on the version you heard; they sometimes identify advertisement-specific jingles or register them as “custom/commercial.”
However, given that the jingle was custom-produced and the singer is not officially credited publicly, you may not find a “commercial album” version of your exact cut.
Why Brands Create Original Songs for Commercials Like This
There are several reasons why a brand like Skyrizi’s manufacturer (AbbVie) would commission an original jingle rather than licensing a popular song:
Full branding control. Original songs allow for lyrics tailored directly to the message (e.g., “Nothing is everything”) and avoid competition/licensing issues with existing tracks.
Cost considerations. Licensing a hit song can cost hundreds of thousands of dollars (or more) plus ongoing royalties. A custom jingle often offers cleaner budgeting.
Multiple versions flexibility. As we saw, multiple musical genres (rock, country, lounge) can be created under the same theme, allowing adaptation.
Avoiding distraction. Using a known pop song might pull attention to the song itself rather than the message. A custom tune keeps focus on the brand.
Ownership and reuse. The production house or brand owns the recording and masters, so they can reuse the tune across media, platforms, and repeat campaigns without additional licensing.
Regulatory alignment. Pharmaceutical ads need careful regulatory compliance; simpler music licensing and production can reduce legal risk.
Thus, “Nothing Is Everything” is a textbook example of how a brand-specific jingle is crafted for longevity, flexibility, and consistent message delivery.
Summary: The Song Name and What We Can Conclusively Say
Here’s what we can definitively say:
The song used in many Skyrizi commercials is titled “Nothing Is Everything.”
It is a custom-made jingle commissioned for the Skyrizi campaign (by AbbVie / its agency) rather than a pre-existing popular song.
Public sources do not list a widely announced performer name for the commercial version of the jingle.
There are multiple musical arrangements of the jingle—with country, rock, lounge, and other stylistic versions in circulation.
If you heard a specific version (tempo, vocal style, instrumentation), you may want to identify the exact commercial cut to narrow it down, because “Nothing Is Everything” takes many forms.
Final Thoughts: A Jingle That Works—and That’s the Point
In a world full of pop-song syncs in commercials, the jingle for Skyrizi stands out because it’s bespoke, memorable and consistent across many spots—even though the performer remains anonymous to the public. The phrase “Nothing is everything” resonates with the brand promise, and the flexibility of the tune enables the brand to sustain campaign longevity without being tied to the lifecycle of a charting song.
So next time you hear “Nothing is everything” playing behind the Skyrizi commercial, you’ll know: it’s not a hit single, it’s an original jingle made for purpose—and the fact that the singer isn’t credited publicly is entirely by design.