Fear Street Part One: 1994 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Film score by Marco Beltrami and Marcus Trumpp | ||||
Released | July 2, 2021 | |||
Recorded | 2021 | |||
Genre | Film score | |||
Length | 44:54 | |||
Label |
| |||
Fear Street soundtracks chronology | ||||
| ||||
Marco Beltrami chronology | ||||
| ||||
Marcus Trumpp chronology | ||||
|
Fear Street Part One:1994 (Music from the Netflix Trilogy) is the film score soundtrack to the 2021 film Fear Street Part One:1994 ,the first instalment in the Fear Street trilogy. Composed by Marco Beltrami and Marcus Trumpp,their score consisted of 19 tracks that are released by Maisie Music Publishing and Milan Records on July 2,2021,with an expanded score being released with its sequels by Intrada Records on August 2024. The score is influenced by horror films from the 1990s,most notably the score for Scream (1996) which was composed by Beltrami himself.
In May 2021,it was announced that Marco Beltrami would compose the musical score for the trilogy,where he would collaborate with Marcus Trumpp for the score. [1] The film's director Leigh Janiak met Beltrami to discuss the music,which he eventually agreed to do so. She had listened to the score of Scream (1996) composed by Beltrami and liked it which she defined it as a "revolutionary in what they did for horror sound" which was bombastic and filled with unnerving choices. [2] The resultant score is being influenced from Beltrami's compositions in Scream and other horror films in the 1990s. [2]
Before scripting the film,Janiak had compiled a selection of songs in a playlist when she pitched the project and played them while writing the story. He then shared the playlists with the cast and crew and listened to it on set. [3] She added that "it was important to find music that thematically spoke to the moment that the characters were in,which can immediately bring you back to that place." [4]
Fear Street Part One:1994 (Music from the Netflix Trilogy) was released day-and-date with the film on July 2,2021,distributed by Maisie Music Publishing and Milan Records. [5] [6]
In mid-July 2021,Waxwork Records announced that it would distribute the triple LP album of the score for Part One:1994 and its sequels,that would feature original artworks inspired by the graphic novels and liner notes from Beltrami,Janiak and others. [7] [8] The album was released on November 12,2021. [9] [10]
Jonathan Broxton in his review for Movie Music UK called it as "one of the most enjoyable,unpretentiously entertaining horror scores Beltrami has written in quite some time,a superb combination of thematic strength and full-blooded orchestral butchery that truly engrosses from start to finish." [11] Benjamin Lee of The Guardian called it as a "a high-drama and high-impact score that is a nice,and thrilling,touch". [12] Kristy Puchko of IGN India wrote "composer Marco Beltrami brings chills with a score that harkens back to his work on The Faculty and the Scream movies." [13]
Lovia Gyarkye of The Hollywood Reporter described the score as "appropriately suspenseful", [14] while Jim Vorel of Paste called it as "evocative". [15] Erik Kain of Forbes wrote that the score and its soundtrack "does its best to provoke the nostalgia centers in our brains". [16] Chad Collins of Dread Central called it as an "indefatigable,Scream-esque score" that sounds "so much like his nineties work". [17]
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | "Mall Massacre" | 3:53 |
2. | "Main Titles" | 2:07 |
3. | "Morning in Shadyside" | 2:00 |
4. | "Candlelight Vigil" | 3:16 |
5. | "Stop the Bus" | 1:36 |
6. | "Goode in the Woods" | 1:50 |
7. | "Some Creeper" | 1:58 |
8. | "Skullmask" | 2:46 |
9. | "Sheriff Goode" | 2:45 |
10. | "Reminder of Us" | 3:41 |
11. | "Bathroom Blowout" | 2:31 |
12. | "Sam Bait" | 2:27 |
13. | "Berman Is the Key" (co-composed by Brandon Roberts) | 2:29 |
14. | "Market Massacre" | 6:26 |
15. | "Bring Her Back" | 2:11 |
16. | "See You Tonight" | 1:32 |
17. | "Sam Attack" | 1:26 |
Total length: | 44:54 |
Intrada Records released a 5-CD box set that featuring the complete score for the three films, including previously unreleased materials, on August 2, 2024. [18] Disc 1 and disc 2 compile the music for this film. [19]
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | "Logo" | 0:26 |
2. | "Mall Massacre" | 5:57 |
3. | "Main Titles" | 2:08 |
4. | "Tragedy Struck Again" | 2:04 |
5. | "She Reaches from Beyond" | 2:56 |
6. | "Candlelight Vigil" | 3:20 |
7. | "Look to the Light" | 1:32 |
8. | "Stop the Bus" | 1:39 |
9. | "After the Crash" | 1:15 |
10. | "Goode in the Woods" | 1:54 |
11. | "Morning in Shadyside" | 1:36 |
12. | "Some Creeper" | 2:03 |
13. | "Arguing Peter to Death" | 1:31 |
14. | "Skullmask" | 2:50 |
15. | "Sheriff Goode" | 3:02 |
16. | "Deena's Got a Gun" | 1:49 |
17. | "Ruby Attacks" | 3:07 |
18. | "Curse Is Real" | 3:08 |
19. | "Dead Maniacs" | 3:39 |
20. | "Just Like Jaws" | 2:20 |
21. | "A Reminder of Us" | 3:43 |
22. | "Bathroom Blowout" | 3:36 |
23. | "Sam Bait" | 2:37 |
24. | "C Berman Is the Key" | 2:35 |
25. | "Goode Warning" | 2:56 |
26. | "Right Now You Have to Die" | 3:01 |
27. | "Market Massacre" | 6:32 |
28. | "Bring Her Back" | 2:22 |
29. | "Fell on Glass" | 2:38 |
30. | "See You Tonight" | 1:36 |
31. | "Berman Calls Deena" | 2:23 |
32. | "Mall Massacre" (film version alternate ending) | 1:33 |
33. | "Main Titles" (alternate film version) | 1:51 |
Total length: | 85:39 |
The soundtrack featured licensed songs from the 1990s, where few of them released after 1994, where the film's story is set in that period. [20] Though an official soundtrack was not released, Netflix issued a playlist featuring the songs in Spotify. [21] [22]
# | Artist(s) | Song | Key scene(s)/Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Nine Inch Nails | "Closer" | Played over the opening murder scene in the mall. |
2 | Garbage | "Only Happy When It Rains" | Played in a sequence where Deena tries to write her hate note to Sam. |
3 | Iron Maiden | "Fear of the Dark" | Josh chats online to the Shadyside Killers chat group. |
4 | Bush | "Machinehead" | Josh walks through his school corridors (originally released in 1996). |
5 | Sophie B. Hawkins | "Damn I Wish I Was Your Lover" | Josh sees his crush Kate at school and time slows down. |
6 | Portishead | "Sour Times" | As Deena walks through school and was annoyed at the sight of students kissing. |
7 | Cypress Hill | "Insane in the Brain" | Deena gets on the bus to the football game against Sunnyvale |
8 | Radiohead | "Creep" | Deena listens to music on the way to the game. |
9 | 99 tales | "Thursday" | Plays quietly in the background as Deena calls Sam’s house after the game and the crash. |
10 | White Zombie | "More Human Than Human" | The song is played twice in the film. Once, where Josh plays video games in his room and the second time at the film's end credits (originally released in 1995). |
11 | Snoop Dogg | "Gz and Hustlas" | Kate and Simon babysit Deena's neighbor. |
12 | Roberta Flack | "Killing Me Softly with His Song" | Deena and the kids go to the hospital to visit an injured Sam. |
13 | White Town | "Your Woman" | Deena and the kids meet Nurse Eddy (originally released in 1995). |
14 | The Mills Brothers | "You Always Hurt The One You Love" | Simon is attacked by Ruby, who sings a second version of that song as she did when she killed her victims. |
15 | Cowboy Junkies | "Sweet Jane" | Plays when Josh and Kate share a kiss, so as Sam and Deena. |
16 | The Prodigy | "Firestarter" | The kids lay a trap for the witch's henchmen in the school (originally released in 1996). |
17 | Pixies | "Hey" | Played in Sam's mixtape at the very end, as he and Deena cuddle in bed. |
18 | Soundgarden | "The Day I Tried To Live" | Josh talks online again to explain the murders as Sam attacks Deena upstairs. |
19 | Alice Cooper | "School's Out" | Plays over the tease for the sequel. |
Fear Street is a teenage horror fiction series written by American author R. L. Stine, starting in 1989. In 1995, a series of books inspired by the Fear Street series, called Ghosts of Fear Street, was created for younger readers, and were more like the Goosebumps books in that they featured paranormal adversaries and sometimes had twist endings.
Marco Beltrami is an American composer of film and television scores. He has worked in a number of genres, including horror, action, science fiction, Western, and superhero.
Scream is an American murder mystery and meta slasher franchise that includes six films, a television series, merchandise, and games. The first four films were directed by Wes Craven. The series was created by Kevin Williamson, who wrote the first two films and the fourth, and will return to direct the seventh film. Ehren Kruger wrote the third. The fifth and sixth installments were directed by Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett, with Guy Busick and James Vanderbilt serving as writers and Williamson returning as executive producer. Dimension Films produced the first four films. Spyglass Media Group took over the rights from the fifth film on with Paramount Pictures distributing. The film series has grossed over US$900 million at the global box office.
Fear Street Part One: 1994 is a 2021 American supernatural slasher film directed by Leigh Janiak. The first installment in the Fear Street trilogy, the film was written by Phil Graziadei and Janiak from a story by Kyle Killen, Graziadei, and Janiak, based on the book series of the same name by R. L. Stine. The film follows a teen and her friends after a series of brutal slayings, as they take on an evil force that has plagued their notorious town for centuries. It stars Kiana Madeira, Olivia Scott Welch, Benjamin Flores Jr., Julia Rehwald, Fred Hechinger, Ashley Zukerman, Darrell Britt-Gibson, and Maya Hawke.
Fear Street Part Two: 1978 is a 2021 American supernatural slasher film directed by Leigh Janiak. It is the second installment in the Fear Street trilogy, with a script co-written by Janiak and Zak Olkewicz from a story by Janiak, Olkewicz and Phil Graziadei, based on R. L. Stine's book series of the same name. The film centers on the cursed town of Shadyside, a killer's murder spree terrorizes Camp Nightwing and turns a summer of fun into a gruesome fight for survival. It stars Sadie Sink, Emily Rudd, Ryan Simpkins, McCabe Slye, Ted Sutherland, Gillian Jacobs, Kiana Madeira, Benjamin Flores Jr., and Olivia Scott Welch.
Fear Street Part Three: 1666 is a 2021 American supernatural horror film directed by Leigh Janiak, who co-wrote the screenplay with Phil Graziadei and Kate Trefry. Based on the book series of the same name by R. L. Stine, it is the third and final installment of the Fear Street trilogy after Part One: 1994 and Part Two: 1978 and stars Kiana Madeira, Ashley Zukerman, Gillian Jacobs, Olivia Scott Welch, Benjamin Flores Jr., and Darrell Britt-Gibson. The film follows the origins of Shadyside's curse in the mid-17th century and the survivors in 1994 who try to put an end to it.
Logan: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack is the score album to the 2017 film of the same name, featuring the Marvel Comics character Wolverine. It is the tenth installment in the X-Men film series and the third and final installment in the Wolverine trilogy following X-Men Origins: Wolverine (2009) and The Wolverine (2013). The film is directed by James Mangold, and featured musical score composed by Marco Beltrami, having previously worked together in the predecessor.
The Wolverine (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) is the soundtrack album to the 2013 superhero film of the same name, directed by James Mangold. Featuring the Marvel Comics character Wolverine, the film is the sixth installment in the X-Men film series, the second installment in the trilogy of Wolverine films after X-Men Origins: Wolverine (2009), and a spin-off/sequel to X-Men: The Last Stand (2006). The film's musical score is composed by Marco Beltrami, who previously scored Mangold's 3:10 to Yuma (2007).
Leigh Anne Janiak is an American film director and screenwriter. She is best known for directing the horror films Honeymoon (2014) and the Fear Street Trilogy (2021).
Fear Street is a series of American horror films based on R. L. Stine's book series of the same name. Involving slasher and supernatural elements, the films' overall story revolves around teenagers who work to break the curse that has been over their town for hundreds of years. The first three installments were directed by Leigh Janiak from scripts and stories she co-wrote with other contributors, while the upcoming fourth film will be directed by Matt Palmer from a script he co-wrote with Donald McLeary. Produced and developed by 20th Century Fox and Chernin Entertainment, the film's distribution rights were eventually acquired by Netflix following The Walt Disney Company's purchase of 21st Century Fox.
Fantastic Four (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) is the soundtrack album to the 2015 film Fantastic Four. Directed by Josh Trank, the film is based on the Marvel Comics superhero team of the same name, and is a reboot of the Fantastic Four film franchise. The musical score is composed by Marco Beltrami and Philip Glass, and the album was released in digital and physical formats on August 7, 2015 by Sony Classical Records, coinciding the film's release. It was also released in two-disc vinyl sets on August 10. Apart from featuring Beltrami and Glass' score, it also featured an original song "Another Body" performed by El-P and a single "Fantastic" performed by RM and Mandy Ventrice. The latter was only used for promotional purposes for the South Korean theatrical release, and is not featured in the film or the soundtrack.
Snowpiercer: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack is the album consisting of the original score composed by Marco Beltrami, for the Bong Joon-ho directorial Snowpiercer (2013). The album was published by CJ E&M Music, and released in South Korea on 21 August 2013, followed by an international release on 9 September. The soundtrack for the North American release, was distributed by Varèse Sarabande, and saw an official release on 11 June 2014.
Venom: Let There Be Carnage is the soundtrack for the 2021 American superhero film Venom: Let There Be Carnage directed by Andy Serkis, featuring the Marvel Comics character Venom, the second installment in Sony's Spider-Man Universe and the sequel to Venom (2018), features an original score composed by Marco Beltrami and a series of songs in the film. After previously writing a single for the first film, Eminem was revealed to write the song "Last One Standing", in collaboration with Skylar Grey, Polo G, and Mozzy. The single was released on September 30, 2021.
The Giver (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) is the score album composed by Marco Beltrami for the 2014 film of the same name directed by Phillip Noyce. The album was released on August 12, 2014 by Sony Music and features 20 tracks from the score. It was preceded by a mix of songs from the film released into a separate 10-song soundtrack titled The Giver (Music Collection), on August 5, by Interscope Records, led by OneRepublic's original song "Ordinary Human" written for the film.
World War Z: Music from the Motion Picture is the score album to the 2013 film of the same name directed by Marc Forster. Featuring original score composed by Marco Beltrami, the album featuring 11-tracks were released by Warner Bros. Records on June 18, 2013.
The music to the 1996 slasher film Scream directed by Wes Craven featured two albums released in order to promote the film. An original soundtrack to the film featuring several songs as heard in the film, released on December 17, 1996, by TVT Records. Marco Beltrami's score for the film was released along with Scream 2, in a double-disc album in July 1998. The soundtrack and score received acclaim from critics.
The music to the 2000 slasher film Scream 3, featured two albums to promote the film. The first one, consisted of an original soundtrack, released as Scream 3: The Album by Wind-up Records on January 25, 2000. It features 18 songs consisted largely of the metal genre by artists such as System of a Down, Slipknot, Powerman 5000, Full Devil Jacket, Godsmack, Sevendust, Incubus, Static-X and Coal Chamber, some of which are represented in the film. It was commercially successful, peaking at number 32 on the Billboard 200 charts, and also certified gold by the Recording Industry Association of America, signifying that the album achieved sales in excess of 500,000 units. The album was released on iTunes on February 1, 2012.
A Quiet Place (Music from the Motion Picture) is the soundtrack to the 2018 film of the same name directed by John Krasinski. Featuring musical score composed by Marco Beltrami, the soundtrack was released under the Milan Records label on April 6, 2018.
Fear Street Part Two: 1978 is the film score soundtrack to the 2021 film Fear Street Part Two: 1978, the second instalment in the Fear Street trilogy and a continuation to Fear Street Part One: 1994. The musical score is composed by Marco Beltrami and Brandon Roberts who produced an orchestral score that resembled of the 1970s horror films. The album was released by Maisie Music Publishing and Milan Records on July 9, 2021.
Fear Street Part Three: 1666 is the film score soundtrack to the 2021 film Fear Street Part Three: 1666, the third instalment in the Fear Street trilogy, following Fear Street Part One: 1994 and Part Two: 1978. The film is jointly scored by Marco Beltrami, Anna Drubich and Marcus Trumpp.