Is Muse Featured In The Moonlight Soundtrack?

2026-05-08 16:10:27 211
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4 Answers

Zane
Zane
2026-05-09 18:52:12
Moonlight's music feels like a character itself—raw, tender, and deeply personal. Muse's anthemic sound doesn't align with that at all. Britell's score leans into silence and space, letting the emotions breathe. I once tried playing 'Starlight' over a scene from the film as an experiment; it felt jarringly out of place. The soundtrack's magic lies in its restraint. If you want Muse, their live album 'HAARP' has that grandeur, but Moonlight? It's a different kind of masterpiece, one that doesn't need guitars to soar.
Victoria
Victoria
2026-05-12 13:14:17
As a music nerd who obsesses over film scores, I went down a rabbit hole with Moonlight's soundtrack. Muse? Nope, not there. But what's cool is how Nicholas Britell uses chopped and screwed classical techniques to mirror the protagonist's journey. It's minimalist but deeply evocative—like a heartbeat under the scenes. Muse's bombastic tracks would've clashed with that intimacy. Still, it's fun to imagine alternate universes where their song 'Undisclosed Desires' could've fit a montage, though the actual soundtrack is better without it.
Rebekah
Rebekah
2026-05-13 17:26:54
Moonlight is one of those soundtracks that lingers in your mind long after the credits roll. I've listened to it countless times, dissecting every note, and I can confidently say Muse isn't part of it. The score, composed by Nicholas Britell, has this haunting, almost ethereal quality—lots of piano and strings, but no rock elements that would hint at Muse's style. Britell's work is more about subtle emotional layers, which fits the film's introspective vibe perfectly.

That said, if you're craving something with Muse's energy, their album 'Simulation Theory' has a cinematic feel that might scratch that itch. It's got that blend of electronic and rock that could soundtrack a completely different kind of movie—something more futuristic or dystopian. Moonlight's soundtrack is a masterpiece in its own right, just in a totally different lane.
Ethan
Ethan
2026-05-13 23:56:53
Nope, Muse isn't in Moonlight's soundtrack—it's all Nicholas Britell's haunting compositions. The closest connection? Maybe the way both Muse and Britell play with tension, but Britell's approach is quieter, more shattered. Muse's 'Black Holes and Revelations' could soundtrack a sci-fi epic, while Moonlight's score feels like whispered secrets. Both brilliant, just for wildly different moods.
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