The soundtrack that has always belonged to football
The first thing many people remember from a football match is a goal.
The second might be a save, a celebration, or a dramatic final whistle.
But ask supporters what stays with them years later, and surprisingly often, it is neither.
It is the song.
Before kickoff, before the first pass, and long after the trophy has been lifted, football has always had its own soundtrack.
The game has never been silent.
Football was born with music
Perhaps that is no coincidence.
Modern football and much of modern popular music grew from similar places.
Industrial cities.
Working-class communities.
Crowded streets.
Local pride.
Especially in Britain, football and rock music developed almost side by side.
Both became ways for ordinary people to express identity, frustration, hope, and belonging.
A football stadium and a concert venue may look different, but emotionally they share something remarkably similar.
Thousands of strangers arrive separately.
By the end, they leave having shared the same voice.
Every nation has its own sound
The 2026 FIFA World Cup in the United States has made that relationship even more visible.
This tournament has introduced a new tradition.
Winning teams are accompanied by songs that have become part of their own football identity.
For the United States, supporters celebrate with Take Me Home, Country Roads.
England have embraced Wonderwall, turning one of Britain’s most famous songs into a post-match anthem.
Japan entered the stadium accompanied by Ukasuka-G – Egao no Shori wo Kimi to, a song already familiar to many Japanese supporters.
These are not official FIFA songs.
They are cultural choices.
Music has become another way for each nation to say,
“This is who we are.”
Songs that belong to everyone
Some songs, however, no longer belong to one country.
They belong to football itself.
When We Will Rock You begins before extra time, every supporter understands the moment.
When We Are the Champions plays after the final whistle, victory feels complete.
And perhaps no modern football anthem represents this better than Seven Nation Army.
Originally released by The White Stripes, the song became something entirely different once supporters adopted its unforgettable riff.
Across Europe, its stadium version evolved into a faster, louder chant.
Today, millions of supporters know the melody without ever having listened to the original recording.
Football transformed the song.
And the song transformed football.
More than watching
Perhaps this is what makes football unique.
Supporters do not simply watch.
They participate.
They sing.
Outside football—or perhaps outside live music itself—there are very few places where tens of thousands of people willingly raise their voices together.
No script.
No rehearsal.
No invitation.
Only a shared emotion.
For ninety minutes, a stadium becomes something more than a sports venue.
It becomes a choir.
The soundtrack of memory
Long after the score is forgotten, people still remember where they were when they first heard those songs.
A goal can become a memory.
A song can become a lifetime.
Perhaps that is why football has never needed music as decoration.
Music has always been part of the game itself.
Before every trophy, there was a song.
And long after every trophy, the song remains.
The songs that turn stadiums into one voice.
Curated by FootballGravity on Apple Music.