I get a little giddy helping people find who made music they love, and with 'Little Ghosts' you’ve got a classic lookup mission. Start with the film’s official page or the end credits, then search for the soundtrack album on streaming services, Bandcamp, or Discogs. If those don’t pan out, try the film festival pages where it screened — they often list production credits including score composer. Pro tip: composers sometimes register their work with performing rights organizations, so searching those databases by film title can surface the composer’s name. Doing that once led me to a composer I now follow, so it’s definitely worth it.
I’ve bumped into this question a couple times in forums, because 'Little Ghosts' is not a unique title. Different productions use the same name, and composers range from solo indie musicians to full orchestral composers depending on budget and style. To figure out who actually wrote the score for the version you mean, check the film’s official press kit or the credits at the end — they list composer, orchestrator, and sometimes who arranged the soundtrack album. Also try searching for the soundtrack album title on Discogs or streaming platforms; they often show composer credits, track-by-track. If it’s a smaller film, composers sometimes post their work on YouTube or SoundCloud, so a quick search there can turn up the score and the composer’s name, which is always a neat find that lets you follow their other work.
Wow, I still grin thinking about the little tunes swirling through 'The Little Ghost' — the soundtrack and score were composed by Annette Focks. She gave the film this playful, gently spooky character with orchestral colors that feel both cozy and mischievous. There are light woodwind flourishes, warm strings carrying the main themes, and playful percussion that punctuates the ghost’s antics. It’s the kind of score that sounds like a friendly night-time adventure rather than anything truly scary.
If you want to hunt it down, the music pops up on streaming platforms under the film’s name and in some European film score listings. Listening with headphones, I noticed recurring melodic motifs that act like little character tags for the ghost and the town — that kind of thematic storytelling is exactly what makes a children’s film linger. Personally, I love how Focks balances charm with a hint of melancholy; it feels like a childhood memory set to music, and that’s exactly the vibe I keep coming back to.
If I had to help a friend figure this out, I’d tell them to take three steps: watch the end credits, check soundtrack databases, and look up the composer on music-rights sites. Different productions named 'Little Ghosts' could have completely different musical approaches — one might lean electronic and be done by a solo synth artist, another might be orchestral and credited to a composer who specializes in family-friendly scores. For festival or indie versions, the composer might even be credited as part of the director’s team or an up-and-coming local musician. Tracking down the composer gives you a new playlist to explore, and I’ve found some favorite musicians that way, so it’s worth the dig.
Young music nerd here: Annette Focks wrote the soundtrack and score for 'The Little Ghost', and studying it is a little masterclass in economy. She uses concise motifs—three- or four-note kernels—that get reshaped across scenes instead of sprawling themes. Instrumentation skews toward strings and solo woodwinds, with piano and light percussion for rhythmic motion; occasionally she introduces a bell or celesta to highlight magic moments. That restraint lets the visuals breathe while still giving the film a clear sonic identity.
I like to track how Focks changes orchestration rather than melody to shift mood: the same melody played by a solo clarinet and pizzicato strings feels intimate, but when the whole string section carries it with harmonies, it becomes triumphant. For composers, that’s a gorgeous lesson in texture. The score's emotional logic is simple but effective, and it’s fun to listen for the cues that signal the ghost’s curiosity versus the scenes that underscore warmth or tension. Overall, it’s a smart, charming soundtrack that rewards repeat listens and close attention.
2025-10-31 16:03:17
9
View All Answers
Scan code to download App
Related Books
My Lovely Ghost
Whalien52
10
6.7K
"We can't be together if I am still alive..."
"No... Please, don't do that..."
-------------------------------
Ria, a freshmen in college, need to find a new place for her to stay and she just found a perfect one.
A big house in the center of the town, just as she need it. Moreover the price is cheaper than she thought it would be!
Later she found out that she was not the only one who lived in that house.
Someone was already there for years.
Alone...
Waiting for anyone that can help him to find out...
How did he really dead that day....
Aside from helping the ghost, apparently he also helping her to fill her lonely heart,
Protect her fragile self...
He, who is no longer alive understand her feelings better than one who is still breathing...
How can a ghost and a human be together?
Shall the other one have to leave this world too?
I'm a cheapskate, so I decide to rent a haunted apartment at a low price.
On the first night of moving into said apartment, the taps turn on by themselves.
I yell angrily at the empty apartment, "You'd better pay the water bill, then!"
The water stops flowing immediately. It has me thinking that this is the beginning of a long, arduous battle between humans and the supernatural…
Unexpectedly, I see a piping hot meal on the dining table the next day.
I stared wide-eyed at the body in front of me.
A girl.
She was probably at seventeen years old wearing a school uniform.
Like what I wear.
Her body is contorted in an angle I couldn't quite describe but I know would be painful. Her face is covered with her long dry hair and her own blood.
The thing that made me wide-eyed is....
I am that girl.
*******************
This is the story of a wandering ghost as she also met one.
And the two fell in love...
The story and ideas is my own~
Don't plagiarize~
Enjoy!
Everly’s family is unique. Her father is a demigod of Death and her mother is a lycan, making Everly and her siblings unique hybrids with intense abilities.
Eighteen doesn’t mean much for an immortal, but it does mean freedom. Everly finally gets to leave her coven’s realm and explore the human realm on her own.
Determined to prove herself worthy of her family’s name, Everly sets off on a simple mission. Go to the music academy and reap the soul of the phantom that haunts it. It should be simple, but things are far from simple when Everly gets paired with the dark, mysterious, and good looking Sebastian for a performance.
Things heat up between them as they rehearse for their roles to perform two songs from a beloved musical that hits closer to home for Sebastian than Ever realizes.
What happens when Ever discovers Sebastian is the phantom and a hybrid that should not exist? As their slow burn of desire ignites into burning flames neither can ignore, new challenges come their way. They must work together to save the other spirits being trapped by Sebastian’s wicked half-brother, who is hell bent on revenge.
I rented a house with a bloody history because it was cheap.
On the first night after moving in, the faucet turned on by itself.
I yelled into thin air, “Are you paying the water bill?!”
The water instantly stopped flowing.
I thought that was just the beginning of the ghost not bothering me.
Unexpectedly, the next day, I saw a main course with two side dishes prepared on the dining table.
What would you do if your apartment is haunted by a ghost too handsome for any girl peace of mind?
That is the exact problem Maisie is faced with. Falling for a ghost. Moving to a new city only to have all her hopes for her future destroyed, she tried to make do with her current situation only to discover a ghost in her apartment. Things become even more weird when unexplained incidents happen at her work place almost killing her, still Zach helped her with that only to disappear when she confessed her feelings for him.
Heart broken, Maisie did her best to move on but there is only so much you can do to move on when the ghost you love returns to you as your boss.
There’s something about the way a score creeps into your bones that sticks with me, and the music for 'Ghostland' is one of those I keep replaying late at night. The composer behind it is Robin Coudert, who often goes by the moniker 'Rob' in credits. He’s a French composer and producer who leans into cold, atmospheric textures — exactly the sort of sound that fits Pascal Laugier’s unsettling, brutal vision in 'Ghostland'. When I first heard the cues, I was struck by how he mixes analog synths and tense drones with sudden, jarring moments of percussion and processed strings; it’s the kind of score that doesn’t just sit under the scene, it manipulates your mood like an extra character.
I’ve followed Rob’s work for a while, so spotting his fingerprints felt familiar — dense atmospherics, occasional melodic fragments that feel almost like a memory, and an overall sense of claustrophobic tension. If you liked the eerie electro-acoustic vibe in other modern horror scores, you’ll probably appreciate what he does here. I often queue up his soundtrack while doing creative work because it’s immersive without being melodically intrusive; it’s great for concentrating or for re-experiencing the film’s emotional shocks. The soundtrack is available on the usual streaming services and on soundtrack outlets, so it’s easy to find if you want to dive deeper.
Beyond 'Ghostland', if you want to trace his style, check out some of his other film projects: they often showcase the same textural courage and appetite for uneasy sound design. For me, recognizing a composer across different films is one of the small pleasures of being a cinephile — and Rob’s signature is a rewarding one to follow. If you haven’t listened yet, try it in the dark with headphones; it’s oddly cathartic and a little bit deliciously disturbing.
Cool bit of trivia for film-score nerds: the music for 'Pay the Ghost' was composed by Joe Kraemer. He tackles the movie's eerie mood with a lean, suspense-first approach—lots of cold string textures, sparse piano motifs, and low, rumbling brass that creep in just under the dialogue. The result isn’t a blockbuster, symphonic barrage so much as a quietly unsettling atmosphere that lets the scares breathe.
I love how the score gives space to the visuals; Kraemer often uses silence and minimal melodic hints rather than big themes, which makes the few melodic moments land harder. If you want a direct comparison, listen to his work on 'Jack Reacher' for a sense of his versatility—there's the same precision but a very different palette here. Personally, I replayed a few cues late at night and found the restraint really effective for a haunted-family drama—nice and chilly without being overbearing.