Catchy Commercial Jingles [April 2025]
You know how sometimes a song in a commercial you see on TV or a video site just gets stuck in your head? In this article, we’ll introduce the commercial songs that are creating a buzz in April 2025.
It’s packed with the latest CM tracks featuring memorable melodies and catchy phrases.
From songs that make everyone wonder, “What is this track?” to tunes blowing up on social media, we’ll bring you wonderful encounters with music you won’t want to miss.
Catchy Commercial Jingles [April 2025] (1–10)
VOICES Hatsune Miku ver.tilt-six feat. Hatsune Miku

Speaking of Xperia, it evokes the image of being packed with Sony’s latest technology, and the term “cutting-edge technology” also sparks the imagination of the digital world.
This commercial conveys that evolution in technology with a mysterious worldview where Hatsune Miku darts between the realms of digital and reality.
For this imagery that evokes digital advancement, the Hatsune Miku version of “VOICES,” a staple Xperia CM song, has been used.
By layering a digital vocal over a floating, digital sound, it expresses a sense of expanding world.
L.P.D.bradberry orchestra

This commercial introduces the Xperia while also promoting that you can use a Docomo email address.
With a digital worldview that feels like diving into a sea of text, the overlap with Xperia evokes images of technological progress and unknown experiences.
The song that further emphasizes this distinctive atmosphere is “L.
P.
D.” by BRADBERRY ORCHESTRA.
A steady rhythm is laid down, and digital vocals layer over it to create a striking digital aesthetic.
Yesterday Once MoreCarpenters

This Carpenters song was used in a Mitsubishi Electric microwave oven TV commercial that aired in the 1990s.
It was included on their 1973 album “Now & Then” and later released as a single, becoming a popular track.
The lyrics are lyrical and reflective, evoking one’s own past brought back by a favorite song once heard on the radio—something many adults can relate to.
The gentle melody and vocals perfectly match the words, making it all the more appealing, so I highly recommend listening closely while reading the lyrics.
VOICES Guitar ver.Yuki(D_Drive)


This commercial closely follows Ruy Ueda, who excels as a trail runner, while also showing how Xperia helps him.
Thanks to its waterproof design, it’s easy to use even on trail runs, and it fits seamlessly into both daily life and his activities—something the ad highlights clearly.
The song that accentuates this depiction of challenging the unknown is “Voices,” performed by YUKI.
Its guitar tones carry a floating quality that drives the melody, while also conveying a powerful sense of forging a new path.
I decided to see them off with a smile.Kyo Kazato


Panasonic’s commercial portrays the gentle act of capturing irreplaceable everyday moments with a camera.
It features scenes of shooting in a sunlit living room, small items in a general store, and a couple in kimono.
Flowing alongside these images is Kyo Kazato’s “I Decided to See You Off with a Smile.” Its soft, tender melody and calm vocals expand as if cradling someone’s precious memories.
The sentiment behind the song’s title overlaps with the theme of recording and seeing off the moments in the footage, deepening the emotional resonance.
By preserving the important moments found in everyday life with a camera, they become gifts for the future.
It’s a quietly resonant piece filled with that feeling.
DrifterBOOM BOOM SATELLITES


It’s the commercial from 2011 that conveyed how Xperia phones offered by au supported EZweb Mail.
The footage shows various colored Xperias moving around, and its unique worldview gives a sense of diving into an unknown experience.
Emphasizing that distinctive atmosphere is BOOM BOOM SATELLITES’ “Drifter.” With its intense, urgent digital sound, it conveys a powerful feeling of charging forward into the unknown.
Cool Struttin’Sonny Clark

In the 2020 commercial for Koumi Paste featuring Naomi Watanabe, the classic track “Cool Struttin’” by Sonny Clark is played.
Many people will recognize the album cover that features this song.
The design of the album title and artist name even served as the inspiration for the logo of the variety store Village Vanguard.
In that way, this song drew attention beyond just the music itself, and it’s a cool number where the solos—from piano to trumpet and more—are downright electrifying.






