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Fear Street: Prom Queen (soundtrack)

From Wikipedia of Horror

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Fear Street: Prom Queen (Soundtrack from the Netflix Film) is the film score to the 2025 film Fear Street: Prom Queen directed by Matt Palmer, based on the novel The Prom Queen (1992) from the Fear Street book series and the fourth installment in the Fear Street film series. The film score is composed by the Newton Brothers and released through Netflix Music on May 23, 2025.

Background

The Newton Brothers was announced to compose the film score in April 2025, replacing Marco Beltrami who co-composed the previous films in the instalment with his assistants.[1][2] Palmer instructed the team to work on a "synth-heavy" score despite the film's setting in 1988.[3] Nora Felder worked as the music supervisor, who selected some of the successful singles from 1988.[3] According to Palmer, "The challenging thing about the needle drops is there’s so much great music from 1988 that it was tough to pick between different tunes [...] Sometimes it was real heavyweight head-to-heads for certain scenes. Some of the songs, like ‘I’m Not Scared’ [by Eighth Wonder] and [‘White Wedding’ by] Billy Idol, were right there from the script stage, but with others we experimented with different ones. It was tough to choose, because 1988 was a really good year for music."[3]

Release

The score album was released through Netflix Music on May 23, 2025.[4][5]

Reception

Dennis Harvey of Variety wrote "The Newton Brothers’ original score hews to a similar synthy template."[6] Hannah Rose of Comic Book Resources wrote "The original synthwave score, courtesy of the Newton Brothers, is a standout. It sounds like the lovechild of John Carpenter, Power Glove, and the soundtracks of the Puppet Combo horror games."[7] Mark Burger of Yes! Weekly wrote "[The Newton Brothers'] score (heavy on synthesizers) is very much in keeping with the ‘80s setting."[8] Andrew Parker of TheGATE.ca called it "a nice synth heavy score from The Newton Brothers that makes the cool decision to be more like Goblin and Tangerine Dream than John Carpenter for a change (with some serious Sorcerer vibes at times, which is nice, even though it’s not a horror film)".[9] Kat Hughes of The Hollywood News wrote "The score itself is synth heavy, riffing quite strongly in sections on Disasterpeace’s mesmeric It Follows score."[10]

Track listing

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Additional music

Commercial songs featured in the film, but not included in the soundtrack:[11] Template:Div col

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References

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Template:R. L. Stine Template:The Newton Brothers

This article incorporates text from the Wikipedia article "Fear Street: Prom Queen (soundtrack)", available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License.Retrieved 2026-03-03.