Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Entertainment
  3. Music
  4. News

Sam Smith delivers tender new James Bond theme song with Writing’s on the Wall

Add as a preferred source on Google

Today, after denials and cryptic tweets, Sam Smith’s Writing’s On The Wall has been released as the theme song for the upcoming James Bond film, Spectre. Smith becomes the first British male solo singer to sing a 007 theme song since Tom Jones sang the theme for the fourth Bond film, Thunderball in 1965.

Smith’s elegantly somber Writing’s On The Wall is a bit of a departure from the operatic force that was Adele’s Skyfall theme song from 2012. That song earned Adele an Oscar for Best Original Song.

Recommended Videos

That the Spectre theme sounds distinctly softer than many of its predecessors is by design, according to its singer. Smith told NPR Morning Edition his intention with the song was to bring a “a touch of vulnerability” to Bond. But, Smith revealed to The Sun, Spectre director Sam Mendes oversaw the lyrics of the song so Bond “didn’t sound weak” and “he still sounded powerful.” The song is already getting praise from former James Bond actor, Roger Moore:

James Bonds’ softness has been a point of contention in recent months. The estate of James Bond creator Ian Fleming commissioned Anthony Horowitz to write the upcoming Bond novel. Horowitz recently criticized recent Bond films as featuring a “weak” Bond and disapproves of the upcoming Spectre delving into Bond’s family background. In a recent interview, Horowitz said “I don’t want to know about his doubts, his insecurities or weaknesses. I just want to see him act, kill, win.” The author has had no shame in sharing his sometimes controversial opinions about the character, causing a recent social media kerfuffle for the racial implications of telling the Daily Mail that he felt actor Idris Elba was “too street” for the role.

The new James Bond film, Spectre, hits theaters in North America on November 6.

Stream Sam Smith’s Writing’s On The Wall below:

Keith Nelson Jr.
Former Staff Writer, Entertainment
Keith Nelson Jr is a music/tech journalist making big pictures by connecting dots. Born and raised in Brooklyn, NY he…
Netflix says it has used AI in over 300 titles and there’s no stopping it now
AI in hollywood is no longer just en experiment.
Netflix on TV couple watching

The Hollywood argument over whether AI belongs in film and television production may already have been overtaken by reality. Netflix has confirmed that its creative partners used generative AI workflows across roughly 300 titles in 2026, with the largest concentration of work happening during post-production.

Keep in mind this number describes AI-assisted production workflows and not 300 completely machine-generated films and shows. Regardless, it does show how quickly the technology has moved beyond isolated experiments.

Read more
Spotify’s new conversational AI can play tracks you request and answer your music questions
A ChatGPT-like AI feature is coming to Spotify for music requests and listening-history questions
spotify

Spotify is rolling out a new AI-powered conversational feature that lets Premium users talk directly to the app about what they want to hear. Users can type or speak a request and refine the results through follow-up questions instead of manually searching for a song, podcast, or audiobook.

The feature is available from Spotify’s Home and Now Playing screens and works much like a personal audio assistant. It can choose what plays, answer questions about the current track or album, recommend something new, and look through your listening history to provide more personalized responses.

Read more
Christopher Nolan’s personal take on smartphones is surprisingly practical
Christopher Nolan says not owning a smartphone helps him think better
Christopher Nolan sits in front of an IMAX camera.

Christopher Nolan has spent his career embracing cutting-edge filmmaking technology while resisting one of the most common gadgets on the planet: the smartphone. The Oscar-winning director behind Oppenheimer, Inception, and the upcoming The Odyssey says his decision isn't about rejecting technology altogether. It's about protecting something he believes has become increasingly rare - time to think.

In an interview with The Telegraph ahead of the premiere of The Odyssey, Nolan explained that he still doesn't own a smartphone, despite living in a world where QR codes, digital tickets, and messaging apps have become everyday necessities. His reasoning, however, is far more practical than philosophical.

Read more