Every song on the โEvery Year Afterโ soundtrack
Including songs by Lana Del Rey and Mumford & Sons Sadie Soverall and Matt Cornett lead the cast of romantic drama Every Year After . Based on the novel Every Summer After by Carley Fortune, the seโฆ
Sadie Soverall and Matt Cornett lead the cast of romantic drama Every Year After . Based on the novel Every Summer After by Carley Fortune, the serie
Read Full Story at NME Music โWhy This Matters
The soundtrack for *Every Year After* doesnโt just complement the filmโit elevates its emotional resonance, particularly in a cultural moment where nostalgia-driven storytelling dominates screens. By weaving together indie folk and moody Americana, the music mirrors the filmโs themes of second chances and unresolved love, reinforcing the idea that songwriting and romance often share a heartbeat. For audiences, this pairing could reignite interest in artistically curated soundtracks as a storytelling device in its own right.
Background Context
The resurgence of nostalgic romantic dramas like *Every Year After* reflects a broader appetite for escapism, especially in post-pandemic media consumption where audiences gravitate toward familiar emotional frameworks. Lana Del Reyโs involvementโknown for her melancholic lyricismโsuggests a deliberate alignment with the filmโs tone, while Mumford & Sonsโ inclusion ties into the enduring appeal of folk-rock as a vehicle for storytelling about time and memory. This trend also aligns with the success of streaming-era content that blends literary adaptations with star-studded soundtracks.
What Happens Next
The soundtrackโs success could prompt studios to prioritize original music over licensed tracks in similar projects, especially if it drives streaming engagement or vinyl salesโa lucrative byproduct of modern film marketing. If the film performs well, expect a wave of mid-tier romances leaning on indie artists to create a distinct audio identity, much like the early 2010s heyday of film soundtracks like *The Fault in Our Stars*. The real test, however, will be whether the music outlasts the film as a standalone cultural artifact.
Bigger Picture
This approach to soundtracks mirrors a larger shift in entertainment where music isnโt just background noise but a narrative pillar, mirroring the rise of TikTok-era storytelling where audio cues drive emotional engagement. The blending of literary romance with contemporary indie music also underscores a paradox: while streaming algorithms prioritize bite-sized content, audiences still crave the depth of album-length emotional arcsโhinting at a bifurcation in how stories are told and consumed. For artists, this trend offers a rare alignment of creative control and commercial viability.

