Who Is the Singer that Does the Psoriasis Commercial?
Decoding the catchy jingle behind the Skyrizi psoriasis campaign
(By Carmichael Phillip)
Introduction: That Earworm You Can’t Shake
You have likely seen the Skyrizi commercial for plaque psoriasis, maybe multiple times, and heard the jingle: a bright, light‑melody that plays under the visuals of skin‑clear transformation. It sticks. Viewers often wonder: Who is singing that song? With commercials, especially in the pharmaceutical space, the voice behind the music rarely shows up in the credits—yet the tune becomes part of the brand identity.
This article explores the question: Who is the singer behind the Skyrizi psoriasis commercial song? We’ll examine what is publicly known, what remains uncertain, how the campaign uses the music, and why the identity of the singer may never be fully disclosed—or at least not easily. By the end, you’ll understand why the jingle works, what we do know about the production, and the best answer available.
The Song: “Nothing Is Everything”
The central musical motif for the Skyrizi psoriasis campaign is the original jingle titled “Nothing Is Everything”. According to a Drugs.com article, the song was “written and developed by a third‑party for the Skyrizi commercial and so was the singer. So far none of this information has been made available from AbbVie, the company that makes Skyrizi.”
Further commentary in Looper confirms that the jingle has been rendered in multiple versions (country, rock, lounge) under the same theme, and that the original singer’s identity remains unannounced.
So the key takeaway: the song title is publicly known, but the performer is not publicly credited by name.
Why the Singer’s Name Isn’t Widely Disclosed
Why does the singer’s identity for a national campaign remain undisclosed? Several industry norms help explain:
Custom‑created jingle: The song was specifically written for the brand, not licensed from an existing artist. That means the recording is a “work for hire,” often with the singer as a session vocalist under contract.
Non‑celebrity performer: Unlike ads that feature a known musician, brands may use lesser‑known singers to keep the focus on messaging rather than star power.
Rights and ownership: When the brand or agency commissions the track, the rights typically belong to the brand or production company—thus less incentive to publicly credit the vocalist.
Database and credit limitations: Commercial‑tracking sites like iSpot often show “None have been identified for this spot” when actor or singer credits aren’t submitted.
All of this adds up to the situation: we know the song and that it has multiple versions, but we don’t have a name attached to the performer.
What Clues Exist about the Singer or Version
Though there is no definitive name, a few clues exist worth noting:
The Drugs.com article clearly states the singer’s information has not been made available by AbbVie or the agency.
On Spotify and Bandcamp, a version titled “Nothing Is Everything (Skyrizi Theme)” is listed under the artist name Richard Cheese. However, this version is a lounge‑cover (“Richard Cheese & Lounge Against the Machine”) of the jingle—not necessarily the original commercial version.
On Reddit, fans are trying to identify the voice—one suggested vocalist is Jessica Kline (or “Jess Kline”), though that is unverified and widely speculative.
Reddit
These details help flesh out the environment but don’t yield a confirmed singer.
How Multiple Versions of the Jingle Are Used
One interesting aspect of this campaign is how the jingle “Nothing Is Everything” has been reinterpreted in multiple moods:
A rock‑style version for one spot.
A country‑style or acoustic version for another.
A lounge version (the Richard Cheese cover).
The same lyrics but different arrangements, so the audience may hear slightly different moods while still retaining the ear‑catchy phrase.
This flexible approach helps the brand adapt to different sub‑messages or audiences while maintaining audio consistency. It also complicates singer‑identification because the same brand may use multiple vocalists or session singers across versions.
Summary: What We Can and Cannot Confirm
Here is a breakdown of what is known vs. what remains unknown:
Known:
The song used in the Skyrizi psoriasis commercial is titled “Nothing Is Everything”.
The jingle was custom‑written for the campaign and not a licensed song from an existing artist.
A lounge‑cover version of the jingle is publicly released by Richard Cheese, but that is not necessarily the version used in the original spot.
Richard Cheese
Unknown:
The name of the vocalist who sings the original commercial version.
Whether the singer appears anywhere else publicly or is credited on any mainstream platform.
Whether the brand used the same singer across all versions or multiple performers for different versions.
In other words, the best‑supported answer to the question “Who is the singer?” is: The singer has not been publicly credited; the jingle was created for the campaign and the vocalist remains undisclosed.
Why This Matters—and Why You Might Still Hear It
The fact that the singer remains unnamed may feel unsatisfying, but it speaks to a bigger point about how advertising works:
The goal is memorability, not celebrity association. The jingle is part of the brand identity.
The brand maintains control over the track—allowing flexibility in versions, repetition, and adaptation without having to negotiate new licenses or market a known artist.
For the singer, this may be a lucrative contract (session work) rather than public recognition.
For viewers, the song becomes part of the ad ecosystem—once you hear “Nothing is everything,” you associate it with the brand even without knowing who sings it.
Because of this setup, the jingle is likely to continue being reused or refreshed, which means you may keep hearing variants of it even though the singer remains hidden in the credits.
Final Thoughts: The Best Answer Available
If you’re looking for a definitive name of the singer behind the Skyrizi psoriasis commercial—here’s the plain answer: As of now, AbbVie and the associated agency have not publicly disclosed the singer’s identity. The jingle is “Nothing Is Everything,” written for the campaign, but the vocalist remains uncredited in widely accessible sources.
For now, the best you can know is the song title, its purpose, and that it was created specifically for the brand.