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Lovely commercial jingle

Summary of Google's commercials. Introducing ads for Pixel and related services!

Google’s search engine has become so essential that it’s practically part of our infrastructure.

Beyond its search engine, Google also develops a range of products and services, including Pixel smartphones, Chromebooks, and more.

In this article, we’ll showcase a wide selection of commercials for Google-related products and services all at once.

You’ll find plenty of ads with the kind of humor you’d expect from a global company, as well as many featuring stylish, visually appealing production.

We’ll also highlight the background music used in each commercial, so take this opportunity to sit back and enjoy.

Compilation of Google commercials: Introducing ads for Pixel and related services! (91–100)

Google Chromebook Plus: “More than you imagined it could do”

Chromebook Plus – More than you imagined it could do.

This is a commercial for Chromebook Plus, the laptop developed by Google.

The stylish, quintessentially Google visuals are striking, clearly showcasing Chromebook Plus’s high performance and security.

The background music is “Lookee Lookee” by Royal Cinema, a duo formed in California.

Released in 2020, the track features a powerfully bouncing bass and catchy vocals that make it an irresistible song.

Google Assistant “What’s this song?” version

Google Assistant | “What’s this song?” Edition

Maika Loubté is a half-Japanese, half-French singer-songwriter.

Her appeal lies in her deep compositional sensibility born from her background as a pianist, along with her airy, floating vocals.

She turns techno music into catchy pop that’s wonderfully easy to listen to—exactly the kind of sound that makes you want to ask Google, “What’s this song?”

Now, everyone, to the #NewBestSeats

Now, everyone, to the #NewBestSeats

Because the genres Schumann worked in tended to cluster by period, 1840 is known as his “year of song,” 1841 as his “year of orchestral music,” and 1842 as his “year of chamber music.” This piece was composed over the course of three months in 1842, the year of chamber music.

It was premiered at Leipzig’s Gewandhaus, with his wife Clara at the piano.

“Scherzo” is an Italian word meaning “joke,” used for light, humorous, fast-tempo instrumental pieces.

This lively work, full of playfulness and drive, makes effective use of scales that sweep up and down.

Google app “All the hot topics SHISHAMO’s curious about, delivered together” version

Google app: Delivering all the SHISHAMO topics you're interested in, all in one place

This is the song that was used as the background music in a Google app commercial released in 2019.

It’s an anthem cheering on people who fight through school and work every day, encouraging those who stumble but give their all to get back up and keep running.

With an energizing performance and a vibrant, spirited vocal, it’s a track that gives you strength.

It’s the kind of song you want to listen to when you’re feeling down.

Google Pixel 5 / Pixel 4a (5G) “The doting-parent camera made by Google — a high-performance camera”

Google Pixel 4a | 5 5G TV commercial “The doting-parent camera made by Google – High-performance camera” 15 seconds

YOASOBI is a duo that turns novels into music.

Encore is a song based on Namishita Mizuage’s The End of the World, and a Farewell Song, depicting two musicians who meet on the last day of the world.

The novel won the grand prize in the Night Play Contest vol.

1, held in July 2020 on the novel-posting site monogatary.com, where submitted stories are adapted into songs.

Only the original novel had been released, and the song was unveiled for the first time through a Google commercial.

Google ‘Android, be your true self’ version

Android: Be your true self

Banvox is a Japanese DJ and sound producer.

He made his major debut in 2010 and broke through with the 2011 mini-album “Intense Electro Disco.” He has also been active as a music producer, working on tracks such as Tomohisa Yamashita’s “Theme of YOU” and Shonan no Kaze’s “Hanabi.” Banvox is known for the classic technique of “vocal cut-up,” in which existing audio files are chopped, rearranged, and altered in pitch and rhythm to create new phrases.

Please enjoy this high-level track that makes full use of that method!

Google app: “I want to know this year’s hit songs” ad

Google App: I Want to Know This Year’s Hit Songs (Edition)

In the 2018 Google app commercial titled “I want to know this year’s hit songs,” Matsuko searches for the year’s hits, and in the flow of the spot, Aimyon’s signature song “Marigold” plays.

Aimyon had been steadily building her career and gradually gaining popularity, but this song became the catalyst for her major breakthrough in 2018.

The track carries a somewhat nostalgic feel with hints of classic kayōkyoku, and her warm, rich lower register is distinctive—qualities that are showcased fully in this song.

It’s a highly approachable, irresistibly catchy number that makes you want to sing along, with lyrics whose vivid imagery brings scenes to life right before your eyes.