Selects existing music for the film, negotiates licensing rights, and coordinates between the director and composer.
Technical Details
Music Supervisors work with standardized license forms: Master-Use License (for the recording) and Sync License (for the composition), with costs ranging from 2,000 to 500,000 Euros per song. They manage music databases with up to 50,000 cataloged tracks and utilize specialized software such as Soundtrack Pro or Music Supervisor's Toolkit. Typical deliverables include cue sheets with exact timecodes, GEMA/BMI registrations, and separate stem files in 48kHz/24Bit for re-mixing.
History & Development
In 1983, Becky Shargo served as the first official Music Supervisor for "Flashdance" after its soundtrack sold 20 million copies. Gary LeMel pioneered the profession at Warner Bros starting in 1985 by introducing systematic music clearance processes. With "The Big Chill" (1983), the concept of the compilation soundtrack as a marketing tool became established. Since 2000, the profession has become professionalized through the Guild of Music Supervisors; today, approximately 400 certified Music Supervisors work worldwide.
Practical Application in Film
For "Baby Driver" (2017), Music Supervisor Steven Price coordinated 30 licensed songs with a budget of 10 million dollars, synchronizing them with Edgar Wright's precise action sequences. "Guardians of the Galaxy" (2014) generated 200 million dollars in soundtrack revenue through Dave Jordan's music selection. Music Supervisors typically create 3-5 music versions per scene, provide temp tracks for editing, and coordinate re-records for international versions when licensing rights differ.
Comparison & Alternatives
While the film composer writes original music, the Music Supervisor curates existing catalogs and negotiates rights. Music Editors focus on technical synchronization, while Music Supervisors focus on creative selection and rights clearance. For low-budget productions under 2 million Euros, post-production supervisors often take on this role. Alternatively, productions work with music libraries such as APM or Universal Production Music, which offer flat-rate licensing models starting at 15,000 Euros per film.