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It Chapter Two (soundtrack)

It Chapter Two (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) is the score album to the 2019 film It Chapter Two, a follow-up to It (2017). The film had Benjamin Wallfisch who scored for the first film, returning to score for the sequel. The score is "larger and more matured" than the first film, which demanded Wallfisch a 100-piece orchestra from the Hollywood Studio Symphony and 40-member voice choir performing. The album consisting of 45 tracks, were released by WaterTower Music on August 30, 2019, a week before the film's release.[1] It was further released in double vinyl on December 6, 2019.[2]

It Chapter Two (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)
Film score by
ReleasedAugust 30, 2019 (2019-08-30)
Recorded2019
VenueLos Angeles, California
Studio
GenreFilm score
Length1:41:15
LabelWaterTower Music
Benjamin Wallfisch chronology
Hellboy
(2019)
It Chapter Two
(2019)
The Invisible Man
(2020)

Development Edit

"I wanted to take the themes, which have become familiar, and part of the storytelling from the first film, and give them the sense that they’ve gone through 27 years of not just maturing, but developing a complexity that time brings. That was something we tried to mirror in the musical choices."

— Benjamin Wallfisch, on the development of the original themes from the first film into the sequel.[3]

One of the earliest discussion, Wallfisch had with Muschetti, is how to blend new themes and original themes from the first film with "more scale and ambition to reflect the scope of the film".[4] Hence for Chapter Two, Wallfisch used a 100-piece orchestra from the Hollywood Studio Symphony and 40-member vocal choir, and in addition to several new themes, he re-recorded the themes from the first film's score with more "complex and ambitious arrangements" so as to reflect the characters development over the past 27 years, explaining "There was a lot more music required, which really allowed room for the original themes to develop and evolve in a way driven by the emotional complexity of how the Losers Club grapple with inner demons from the past and painful memories, and ultimately unite to confront their biggest fears."[4]

Especially, for the theme of Pennywise, the film had him "vengeful and flagrant" and have a bigger presence in the film. So that "the music had to also reflect that increased darkness, whilst never losing sight of the adventure and emotion that are at the core of the movie".[4] With The Losers Club returning as adults, Wallfisch had the opportunity to give them more emotional potency. as "they're not just kids going through the process of coming together to defeat this evil. We’re dealing with adults who have grappled with trauma and are coming together and reforming memories that have been lost." Hence, the score was much more complex, as the visual scale and storytelling and much depth in the second instalment.[3][5]

Wallfisch further experimented with close-miked solo strings, where he recorded for sequences which are more visceral, as while using the close miked strings "it had much more drama than going with a hundred people playing together". The sonic choices were "counter-intuitive". He used a lot of post-processing of acoustic instruments, which he turned into electronic textures, with the sounds that originated from the orchestra. He recorded the full orchestra scoring within a single day, so as to get all kinds of "completely off-the-wall and very unusual sounds, which then formed the basis of the more experimental parts of the score". A two-week recording was held at the Barbra Streisand Scoring Stage and Warner Bros.' Eastwood Scoring Stage in Los Angeles, California, while the choir was recorded with RSVP Voices in London, which featured several professional choirs around London. He further reprised the children's choir he used in the first film. He did not re-record, but used the original recordings.[3]

Track listing Edit

All music is composed by Benjamin Wallfisch

It Chapter Two (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)
No.TitleLength
1."27 Years Later"2:06
2."Memory"1:40
3."Come Home"2:24
4."I Swear, Bill"1:30
5."Beverly Escapes"2:21
6."Henry Bowers"1:21
7."Firefly"3:09
8."Losers Reunited"0:52
9."Echo"1:44
10."Fortune Cookies"2:11
11."You Knew"1:49
12."The Library"2:07
13."Shokopiwah"3:29
14."The Barrens"1:21
15."The Clubhouse"3:48
16."Perfume"2:36
17."Mrs. Kersh"1:47
18."Miss Me, Richie?"1:24
19."Your Dirty Little Secret (feat. Pennywise)"1:21
20."Silver Bullet"1:54
21."Why Georgie?"3:45
22."Your Hair Is Winter Fire"3:20
23."Eddie and the Leper"1:50
24."Festival Pursuit"1:06
25."Hall of Mirrors"2:14
26."Bar Mitzvah"1:36
27."Bowers Attack"1:19
28."Back to Neibolt"2:50
29."Home At Last"1:29
30."It's Stan"2:03
31."This Is Where It Happened"2:03
32."The Place of It"1:57
33."Artifacts"3:10
34."The Ritual of Chüd"2:04
35."Very Scary"1:39
36."Scary"1:31
37."Not Scary At All"1:25
38."You Lied and I Died"2:55
39."My Heart Burns There Too"2:30
40."Spider Attack"3:28
41."You're All Grown Up Ew"5:24
42."Neibolt Escape"1:36
43."Nothing Lasts Forever"4:18
44."Goodbye"0:54
45."Stan's Letter"4:18
Total length:1:41:15

Reception Edit

Zanobard Reviews wrote "Benjamin Wallfisch’s score to IT Chapter Two is very, very good. The album expertly captures the atmosphere of IT and embraces its horrific nature to great effect, and of particular note is the way the composer picks out elements from children’s nursery rhymes and then twists and distorts them into something completely petrifying. While the album is a little lengthy (ninety minutes is a long time for a horror score) it is extremely well composed."[6] Jonathan Broxton wrote "with his work on these It movies, Benjamin Wallfisch has created two of the best horror movie scores in many years. To the untrained ear a great deal of the most anarchic dissonance may seem like little more than ear-splitting noise, but I find it all quite fascinating. The creative collisions of sounds, the extended performance techniques, and the allusions to the most challenging and advanced 20th century modernism, are all worthy of significant praise. Not only that, but Wallfisch weaves a half dozen or so identifiable and memorable recurring themes through the score too, and allows them the room to create moments of emotional catharsis when required. The Oranges & Lemons chant for the demented toddlers remains one of the most brilliant and spine-chilling horror music motifs in recent memory. There will be a large number of listeners who simply will not be able to tolerate the onslaught of noise that assails you from the first cue to the last, and those people need to be forewarned that a large portion of this score is very, very, difficult indeed."[7]

Filmtracks.com wrote "the music on the whole is a noteworthy achievement and an improvement on the prior score, which itself was a more than decent entry in the genre. The album release is once again long. At 103 minutes, there is more than twenty minutes of top-notch lyrical suspense material here to add to similar sequences from It and The Cure for Wellness for a fantastic compilation. Note that these generous Wallfisch albums tend to go out of print on CD within a year or two, so you should not hesitate to appreciate a lossless presentation of this strong genre entry sooner rather than later."[8] Film Music Central wrote "Benjamin Wallfisch clearly put a lot of work into this score, and if it’s this scary by itself, I shudder to think what it would be like to hear this music with the film it was written to accompany. If you liked the score for the first It, then you will love the music for It: Chapter Two."[9]

Don Kaye of Den of Geek felt that "Benjamin Wallfisch returns to compose the music for Chapter Two, unfortunately overscoring this one even more than he did Chapter One (one of the first film’s few missteps)."[10] Los Angeles Times writer Jen Yamato wrote "Benjamin Wallfisch’s portentous score signaling the way".[11] Rob Slack of BarrieToday.com score is "top shelf, amazingly creepy and wonderful".[12] Mark Kermode of The Guardian wrote "expansive score amplifies the sense of adventure".[13]

Personnel Edit

Credits adapted from CD liner notes.[14]

  • Music composer and producer – Benjamin Wallfisch
  • Musical assistance – Kaitlyn Delle Donne
  • Programming – Alex Lu, Antonio Andrade, Jared Fry, Michael Parsons
  • Music editing – Lisé Richardson
  • Additional music editing – Nate Underkuffler
  • Mixing – Benjamin Wallfisch, Scott Michael Smith
  • Mixing assistants – Aldo Arechar, Jeff Gartenbaum
  • Mastering – Eric Boulanger, Jett Galindo
  • Music co-ordinator – Celeste Chada, Jen O'Malley
  • Copyist – Booker White, Jill Streater
  • Executive producer – Andy Muschietti
Instruments
  • Bassoon – Kenneth Munday, William May, Rose Corrigan
  • Cello – Ben Lash, Cecilia Tsan, Dennis Karmazyn, Eric Byers, Erika Duke-Kirkpatrick, Evgeny Tonkha, Jacob Braun, Jason Lippmann, Jonathan Karoly, Karen Yeh, Ross Gasworth, Simone Vitucci, Timothy Loo, Vanessa Freebairn-Smith, Helen Altenbach, Andrew Shulman
  • Clarinet – Donald Foster, Joshua Ranz, Ralph Williams, Stuart Clark
  • Contrabass – Christian Kollgaard, David Parmeter, Drew Dembowski, Edward Meares, Geoffrey Osika, Neil Garber, Nico Abondolo, Oscar Hidalgo, Oscar Meza, Stephanie Payne, Stephen Dress, Thomas Harte, Michael Valerio
  • Flute – Geri Rotella, Jennifer Olson, Julie Burkert, Sara Andon
  • Harp – Alison Bjorkedal, Marcia Dickstein
  • Horn – Adedeji Ogunfolu, Aija Mattson, Amy Rhine, Andrew Bain, Benjamin Jaber, Dylan Hart, Jaclyn Rainey, Kaylet Torrez, Laura Brenes, Mark Adams, Sarah Bach, Steven Becknell, Teag Reaves, David Everson
  • Oboe – Claire Brazeau, Jennifer Cullinan, Jessica Pearlman
  • Percussion – Edward Atkatz, Kenneth McGrath, Pete Korpela, Wade Culbreath
  • Trombone – William Reichenbach, Craig Gosnell, David Rejano Cantero, David Stetson, John Lofton, Lori Stuntz, Phillip Keen, Steven Suminski, Steven Trapani, Steven Holtman, Alexander Iles
  • Trumpet – Barry Perkins, Bryce Schmidt, James Wilt, Jon Lewis, Thomas Hooten, Robert Schaer
  • Tuba – Blake Cooper, Doug Tornquist
  • Viola – Aaron Oltman, Alma Fernandez, Andrew Duckles, Ben Ullery, Carolyn Riley, Carrie Holzman-Little, Corinne Sobolewski, Darrin McCann, David Walther, Zach Dellinger, Joshua Newburger, Karoline Menezes Smith, Luke Maurer, Matthew Funes, Meredith Crawford, Michael Larco, Michael Nowak, Michael Whitson, Shawn Mann, Victor de Almeida, Robert Brophy
  • Violin – Akiko Tarumoto, Alyssa Park, Amy Hershberger, Ana Landauer, Andrew Bulbrook, Benjamin Powell, Benjamin Jacobson, Caroline Campbell, Carrie Kennedy, Charlie Bisharat, Darius Campo, Dennis Kim, Elizabeth Johnson, Eun-Mee Ahn, Grace Oh, Hanbyul Lash, Heather Powell, Helen Nightengale, Ina Veli, Irina Voloshina, Jacqueline Brand, Jennifer Fischer, Jennifer Gordon-Levin, Jessica Guideri, Jessica McJunkins, Joel Pargman, Josefina Vergara, Julie Rogers, Ken Aiso, Kerenza Peacock, Kevin Connolly, Kevin Kumar, Laurence Greenfield, Lorand Lokuszta, Lorenz Gamma, Luanne Homzy, Lucia Micarelli, Maia Jasper-White, Marisa Sorajja, Max Karmazyn, Natalie Leggett, Nathan Cole, Neil Samples, Paul Henning, Phillip Levy, Radu Pieptea, Rafael Rishik, Roberto Cani, Roger Wilkie, Sara Parkins, Sarah Thornblade, Serena McKinney, Shalini Vijayan, Songa Lee, Stephanie Yu, Tamara Hatwan, Yelena Yegoryan, Tereza Stanislav
  • Vocals – Cora Nielsen, Eitan Puchalt, Elodie Barker, Jacob Grahame-Smith, Jessica Rau, Joshua Grahame-Smith, Kaden Chea, Riley Holmes, Ruby Eusebio, Tytan Benford
Soloists
  • Piano solos – Benjamin Wallfisch
  • Vocal – Elodie Barker
Choir
  • Choir – RSVP Voices
  • Conductor – Arturo Rodriguez, Rob Johnston
  • Contractor – Rob Johnston, Jasper Randall
  • Recording – Jake Jackson
Orchestra
  • Orchestra – The Hollywood Studio Symphony
  • Orchestration – David Krystal, David Slonaker, Jon Kull, Peter Bateman
  • Concertmaster – Belinda Broughton
  • Contractor – Peter Rotter
  • Recording – Scott Michael Smith
  • Pro Tools operator – Alex Ferguson, Chris Barrett, Larry Mah
Management
  • Executive in charge of music – Jason Linn (WaterTower Music), Erin Scully, Kim Baum (New Line Cinema)
  • Music business affairs – Ari Taitz, John F.X. Walsh
  • Art direction – Sandeep Sriram

References Edit

  1. ^ "IT Chapter Two (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) WaterTower Music". WaterTower Music. Retrieved December 29, 2022.
  2. ^ "NOW AVAILABLE 'IT CHAPTER TWO' – Original Motion Picture Soundtrack". Horror News. August 31, 2019. Retrieved December 29, 2022.
  3. ^ a b c Combemale, Leslie (September 10, 2019). "It: Chapter Two Composer Benjamin Wallfisch on Scoring Pennywise's Final Act". Motion Picture Association. Retrieved December 29, 2022.
  4. ^ a b c Erbland, Kate (August 29, 2019). "'It Chapter Two': Listen to Two Chilling Exclusive Tracks From Benjamin Wallfisch's Massive New Score". IndieWire. Retrieved December 3, 2019.
  5. ^ Scott, Ryan (July 25, 2019). "IT Chapter Two Is Director Andy Muschietti's Masterpiece Exclaims Composer". MovieWeb. Retrieved December 29, 2022.
  6. ^ Zanobard (August 30, 2019). "IT Chapter Two – Soundtrack Review". Zanobard Reviews. Retrieved December 29, 2022.
  7. ^ "IT: CHAPTER TWO – Benjamin Wallfisch". MOVIE MUSIC UK. September 10, 2019. Retrieved December 29, 2022.
  8. ^ "Filmtracks: It: Chapter Two (Benjamin Wallfisch)". www.filmtracks.com. Retrieved December 29, 2022.
  9. ^ Central, Film Music (September 5, 2019). "Soundtrack Review: It: Chapter Two (2019)". Film Music Central. Retrieved December 29, 2022.
  10. ^ Kaye, Don (September 3, 2019). "It Chapter Two Review". Den of Geek. Retrieved December 29, 2022.
  11. ^ "Review: Overlong 'It Chapter Two' confronts scarier evils than Pennywise the clown". Los Angeles Times. September 3, 2019. Retrieved December 29, 2022.
  12. ^ "Movie Review: It Chapter Two". BarrieToday.com. September 9, 2019. Retrieved December 29, 2022.
  13. ^ "It Chapter Two review – funhouse theatrics with little emotional punch". The Guardian. September 8, 2019. Retrieved December 29, 2022.
  14. ^ Noble, Barnes &. "It Chapter Two [Original Motion Picture Soundttrack]". Barnes & Noble. Retrieved December 29, 2022.

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It Chapter Two Original Motion Picture Soundtrack is the score album to the 2019 film It Chapter Two a follow up to It 2017 The film had Benjamin Wallfisch who scored for the first film returning to score for the sequel The score is larger and more matured than the first film which demanded Wallfisch a 100 piece orchestra from the Hollywood Studio Symphony and 40 member voice choir performing The album consisting of 45 tracks were released by WaterTower Music on August 30 2019 a week before the film s release 1 It was further released in double vinyl on December 6 2019 2 It Chapter Two Original Motion Picture Soundtrack Film score by Benjamin WallfischReleasedAugust 30 2019 2019 08 30 Recorded2019VenueLos Angeles CaliforniaStudioBarbra Streisand Scoring Stage Sony Pictures StudiosEastwood Scoring Stage Warner Bros StudiosGenreFilm scoreLength1 41 15LabelWaterTower MusicBenjamin Wallfisch chronologyHellboy 2019 It Chapter Two 2019 The Invisible Man 2020 Contents 1 Development 2 Track listing 3 Reception 4 Personnel 5 ReferencesDevelopment Edit I wanted to take the themes which have become familiar and part of the storytelling from the first film and give them the sense that they ve gone through 27 years of not just maturing but developing a complexity that time brings That was something we tried to mirror in the musical choices Benjamin Wallfisch on the development of the original themes from the first film into the sequel 3 One of the earliest discussion Wallfisch had with Muschetti is how to blend new themes and original themes from the first film with more scale and ambition to reflect the scope of the film 4 Hence for Chapter Two Wallfisch used a 100 piece orchestra from the Hollywood Studio Symphony and 40 member vocal choir and in addition to several new themes he re recorded the themes from the first film s score with more complex and ambitious arrangements so as to reflect the characters development over the past 27 years explaining There was a lot more music required which really allowed room for the original themes to develop and evolve in a way driven by the emotional complexity of how the Losers Club grapple with inner demons from the past and painful memories and ultimately unite to confront their biggest fears 4 Especially for the theme of Pennywise the film had him vengeful and flagrant and have a bigger presence in the film So that the music had to also reflect that increased darkness whilst never losing sight of the adventure and emotion that are at the core of the movie 4 With The Losers Club returning as adults Wallfisch had the opportunity to give them more emotional potency as they re not just kids going through the process of coming together to defeat this evil We re dealing with adults who have grappled with trauma and are coming together and reforming memories that have been lost Hence the score was much more complex as the visual scale and storytelling and much depth in the second instalment 3 5 Wallfisch further experimented with close miked solo strings where he recorded for sequences which are more visceral as while using the close miked strings it had much more drama than going with a hundred people playing together The sonic choices were counter intuitive He used a lot of post processing of acoustic instruments which he turned into electronic textures with the sounds that originated from the orchestra He recorded the full orchestra scoring within a single day so as to get all kinds of completely off the wall and very unusual sounds which then formed the basis of the more experimental parts of the score A two week recording was held at the Barbra Streisand Scoring Stage and Warner Bros Eastwood Scoring Stage in Los Angeles California while the choir was recorded with RSVP Voices in London which featured several professional choirs around London He further reprised the children s choir he used in the first film He did not re record but used the original recordings 3 Track listing EditAll music is composed by Benjamin WallfischIt Chapter Two Original Motion Picture Soundtrack No TitleLength1 27 Years Later 2 062 Memory 1 403 Come Home 2 244 I Swear Bill 1 305 Beverly Escapes 2 216 Henry Bowers 1 217 Firefly 3 098 Losers Reunited 0 529 Echo 1 4410 Fortune Cookies 2 1111 You Knew 1 4912 The Library 2 0713 Shokopiwah 3 2914 The Barrens 1 2115 The Clubhouse 3 4816 Perfume 2 3617 Mrs Kersh 1 4718 Miss Me Richie 1 2419 Your Dirty Little Secret feat Pennywise 1 2120 Silver Bullet 1 5421 Why Georgie 3 4522 Your Hair Is Winter Fire 3 2023 Eddie and the Leper 1 5024 Festival Pursuit 1 0625 Hall of Mirrors 2 1426 Bar Mitzvah 1 3627 Bowers Attack 1 1928 Back to Neibolt 2 5029 Home At Last 1 2930 It s Stan 2 0331 This Is Where It Happened 2 0332 The Place of It 1 5733 Artifacts 3 1034 The Ritual of Chud 2 0435 Very Scary 1 3936 Scary 1 3137 Not Scary At All 1 2538 You Lied and I Died 2 5539 My Heart Burns There Too 2 3040 Spider Attack 3 2841 You re All Grown Up Ew 5 2442 Neibolt Escape 1 3643 Nothing Lasts Forever 4 1844 Goodbye 0 5445 Stan s Letter 4 18Total length 1 41 15Reception EditZanobard Reviews wrote Benjamin Wallfisch s score to IT Chapter Two is very very good The album expertly captures the atmosphere of IT and embraces its horrific nature to great effect and of particular note is the way the composer picks out elements from children s nursery rhymes and then twists and distorts them into something completely petrifying While the album is a little lengthy ninety minutes is a long time for a horror score it is extremely well composed 6 Jonathan Broxton wrote with his work on these It movies Benjamin Wallfisch has created two of the best horror movie scores in many years To the untrained ear a great deal of the most anarchic dissonance may seem like little more than ear splitting noise but I find it all quite fascinating The creative collisions of sounds the extended performance techniques and the allusions to the most challenging and advanced 20th century modernism are all worthy of significant praise Not only that but Wallfisch weaves a half dozen or so identifiable and memorable recurring themes through the score too and allows them the room to create moments of emotional catharsis when required The Oranges amp Lemons chant for the demented toddlers remains one of the most brilliant and spine chilling horror music motifs in recent memory There will be a large number of listeners who simply will not be able to tolerate the onslaught of noise that assails you from the first cue to the last and those people need to be forewarned that a large portion of this score is very very difficult indeed 7 Filmtracks com wrote the music on the whole is a noteworthy achievement and an improvement on the prior score which itself was a more than decent entry in the genre The album release is once again long At 103 minutes there is more than twenty minutes of top notch lyrical suspense material here to add to similar sequences from It and The Cure for Wellness for a fantastic compilation Note that these generous Wallfisch albums tend to go out of print on CD within a year or two so you should not hesitate to appreciate a lossless presentation of this strong genre entry sooner rather than later 8 Film Music Central wrote Benjamin Wallfisch clearly put a lot of work into this score and if it s this scary by itself I shudder to think what it would be like to hear this music with the film it was written to accompany If you liked the score for the first It then you will love the music for It Chapter Two 9 Don Kaye of Den of Geek felt that Benjamin Wallfisch returns to compose the music for Chapter Two unfortunately overscoring this one even more than he did Chapter One one of the first film s few missteps 10 Los Angeles Times writer Jen Yamato wrote Benjamin Wallfisch s portentous score signaling the way 11 Rob Slack of BarrieToday com score is top shelf amazingly creepy and wonderful 12 Mark Kermode of The Guardian wrote expansive score amplifies the sense of adventure 13 Personnel EditCredits adapted from CD liner notes 14 Music composer and producer Benjamin Wallfisch Musical assistance Kaitlyn Delle Donne Programming Alex Lu Antonio Andrade Jared Fry Michael Parsons Music editing Lise Richardson Additional music editing Nate Underkuffler Mixing Benjamin Wallfisch Scott Michael Smith Mixing assistants Aldo Arechar Jeff Gartenbaum Mastering Eric Boulanger Jett Galindo Music co ordinator Celeste Chada Jen O Malley Copyist Booker White Jill Streater Executive producer Andy MuschiettiInstrumentsBassoon Kenneth Munday William May Rose Corrigan Cello Ben Lash Cecilia Tsan Dennis Karmazyn Eric Byers Erika Duke Kirkpatrick Evgeny Tonkha Jacob Braun Jason Lippmann Jonathan Karoly Karen Yeh Ross Gasworth Simone Vitucci Timothy Loo Vanessa Freebairn Smith Helen Altenbach Andrew Shulman Clarinet Donald Foster Joshua Ranz Ralph Williams Stuart Clark Contrabass Christian Kollgaard David Parmeter Drew Dembowski Edward Meares Geoffrey Osika Neil Garber Nico Abondolo Oscar Hidalgo Oscar Meza Stephanie Payne Stephen Dress Thomas Harte Michael Valerio Flute Geri Rotella Jennifer Olson Julie Burkert Sara Andon Harp Alison Bjorkedal Marcia Dickstein Horn Adedeji Ogunfolu Aija Mattson Amy Rhine Andrew Bain Benjamin Jaber Dylan Hart Jaclyn Rainey Kaylet Torrez Laura Brenes Mark Adams Sarah Bach Steven Becknell Teag Reaves David Everson Oboe Claire Brazeau Jennifer Cullinan Jessica Pearlman Percussion Edward Atkatz Kenneth McGrath Pete Korpela Wade Culbreath Trombone William Reichenbach Craig Gosnell David Rejano Cantero David Stetson John Lofton Lori Stuntz Phillip Keen Steven Suminski Steven Trapani Steven Holtman Alexander Iles Trumpet Barry Perkins Bryce Schmidt James Wilt Jon Lewis Thomas Hooten Robert Schaer Tuba Blake Cooper Doug Tornquist Viola Aaron Oltman Alma Fernandez Andrew Duckles Ben Ullery Carolyn Riley Carrie Holzman Little Corinne Sobolewski Darrin McCann David Walther Zach Dellinger Joshua Newburger Karoline Menezes Smith Luke Maurer Matthew Funes Meredith Crawford Michael Larco Michael Nowak Michael Whitson Shawn Mann Victor de Almeida Robert Brophy Violin Akiko Tarumoto Alyssa Park Amy Hershberger Ana Landauer Andrew Bulbrook Benjamin Powell Benjamin Jacobson Caroline Campbell Carrie Kennedy Charlie Bisharat Darius Campo Dennis Kim Elizabeth Johnson Eun Mee Ahn Grace Oh Hanbyul Lash Heather Powell Helen Nightengale Ina Veli Irina Voloshina Jacqueline Brand Jennifer Fischer Jennifer Gordon Levin Jessica Guideri Jessica McJunkins Joel Pargman Josefina Vergara Julie Rogers Ken Aiso Kerenza Peacock Kevin Connolly Kevin Kumar Laurence Greenfield Lorand Lokuszta Lorenz Gamma Luanne Homzy Lucia Micarelli Maia Jasper White Marisa Sorajja Max Karmazyn Natalie Leggett Nathan Cole Neil Samples Paul Henning Phillip Levy Radu Pieptea Rafael Rishik Roberto Cani Roger Wilkie Sara Parkins Sarah Thornblade Serena McKinney Shalini Vijayan Songa Lee Stephanie Yu Tamara Hatwan Yelena Yegoryan Tereza Stanislav Vocals Cora Nielsen Eitan Puchalt Elodie Barker Jacob Grahame Smith Jessica Rau Joshua Grahame Smith Kaden Chea Riley Holmes Ruby Eusebio Tytan BenfordSoloistsPiano solos Benjamin Wallfisch Vocal Elodie BarkerChoirChoir RSVP Voices Conductor Arturo Rodriguez Rob Johnston Contractor Rob Johnston Jasper Randall Recording Jake JacksonOrchestraOrchestra The Hollywood Studio Symphony Orchestration David Krystal David Slonaker Jon Kull Peter Bateman Concertmaster Belinda Broughton Contractor Peter Rotter Recording Scott Michael Smith Pro Tools operator Alex Ferguson Chris Barrett Larry MahManagementExecutive in charge of music Jason Linn WaterTower Music Erin Scully Kim Baum New Line Cinema Music business affairs Ari Taitz John F X Walsh Art direction Sandeep SriramReferences Edit IT Chapter Two Original Motion Picture Soundtrack WaterTower Music WaterTower Music Retrieved December 29 2022 NOW AVAILABLE IT CHAPTER TWO Original Motion Picture Soundtrack Horror News August 31 2019 Retrieved December 29 2022 a b c Combemale Leslie September 10 2019 It Chapter Two Composer Benjamin Wallfisch on Scoring Pennywise s Final Act Motion Picture Association Retrieved December 29 2022 a b c Erbland Kate August 29 2019 It Chapter Two Listen to Two Chilling Exclusive Tracks From Benjamin Wallfisch s Massive New Score IndieWire Retrieved December 3 2019 Scott Ryan July 25 2019 IT Chapter Two Is Director Andy Muschietti s Masterpiece Exclaims Composer MovieWeb Retrieved December 29 2022 Zanobard August 30 2019 IT Chapter Two Soundtrack Review Zanobard Reviews Retrieved December 29 2022 IT CHAPTER TWO Benjamin Wallfisch MOVIE MUSIC UK September 10 2019 Retrieved December 29 2022 Filmtracks It Chapter Two Benjamin Wallfisch www filmtracks com Retrieved December 29 2022 Central Film Music September 5 2019 Soundtrack Review It Chapter Two 2019 Film Music Central Retrieved December 29 2022 Kaye Don September 3 2019 It Chapter Two Review Den of Geek Retrieved December 29 2022 Review Overlong It Chapter Two confronts scarier evils than Pennywise the clown Los Angeles Times September 3 2019 Retrieved December 29 2022 Movie Review It Chapter Two BarrieToday com September 9 2019 Retrieved December 29 2022 It Chapter Two review funhouse theatrics with little emotional punch The Guardian September 8 2019 Retrieved December 29 2022 Noble Barnes amp It Chapter Two Original Motion Picture Soundttrack Barnes amp Noble Retrieved December 29 2022 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title It Chapter Two soundtrack amp oldid 1167857196, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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