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22 Jump Street Album Cover

"22 Jump Street" Soundtrack Lyrics

Movie • 2014

Track Listing



"22 Jump Street (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)" Soundtrack Description

22 Jump Street official trailer frame with Schmidt and Jenko in spring-break shirts and sunglasses
22 Jump Street — Official Trailer, 2014

Questions and Answers

Is there an official soundtrack album?
Yes—22 Jump Street (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) released June 10, 2014 with licensed songs (per Republic Records listings on Apple Music and Spotify). A separate score album also exists.
Who composed the score?
Mark Mothersbaugh composed the original score.
Was the score issued on album?
Yes. La-La Land Records issued a limited 2-CD edition pairing the 22 Jump Street score with 21 Jump Street (Sept. 2014), and a standalone digital score followed via Madison Gate Records.
Who was the music supervisor?
Kier Lehman handled music supervision.
What’s the main title single?
“22 Jump Street (Theme from the Motion Picture)” by Angel Haze featuring Ludacris served as the lead single.
Did the soundtrack chart?
It reached the UK Official Soundtrack Albums Top 20 and appeared on multiple U.S. Billboard charts (per Official Charts Company and trade recaps).

Notes & Trivia

  • Two official albums exist: a 13-track songs compilation (Republic) and a full score by Mark Mothersbaugh (La-La Land / Madison Gate). (as reported by Film Music Reporter)
  • The UK Official Soundtrack Albums Chart logged the compilation in June 2014; it peaked just outside the Top 10. (according to the Official Charts Company)
  • The film uses several high-energy EDM and hip-hop cues that aren’t all on the retail album—classic case of “music in film” vs. “music on album.”
  • Mothersbaugh’s score release was initially a 2,000-copy limited CD pairing both 21 and 22—catnip for collectors.
  • Music supervision by Kier Lehman continued his run with the Lord & Miller team across multiple projects.
22 Jump Street final red band trailer still with spring break stage and confetti
22 Jump Street — Final Red Band Trailer, 2014

Overview

What does a bromance sequel sound like when it grows up and goes to college? Big-room drops, trap snares, and a grinning theme song. 22 Jump Street doubles down on party-energy curation—Wiz Khalifa, Duck Sauce, Tiësto, Diplo, Steve Aoki—then lets Mark Mothersbaugh’s score glue the comedy and action together.

The song album blasts through EDM-leaning cuts engineered for montage momentum, while the score sneaks in character work: synth-forward action cues, a tender “break-up” motif for Schmidt & Jenko’s wobble, and triumphant recaps for their reunion. It’s deliberately maximal—because the joke lands harder when the speakers shake. (as stated in Rhino/Republic-side listings and trade coverage)

Genres & Themes

  • EDM & trap → spring-break spectacle: Festival-scale drops turn parties and chases into the same joke: too much, on purpose.
  • Hip-hop hooks → swagger & smack-talk: Needle-drops give the leads a rhythmic strut they don’t always earn—comic contrast.
  • Synth-action score → partnership arc: Mothersbaugh’s cues track the “breakup/makeup” bromance beats with elastic electronics and brass punches.
Trailer montage of Schmidt and Jenko on campus with neon party lighting
Trailer #1 — campus chaos & neon montage

Key Tracks & Scenes

“22 Jump Street (Theme from the Motion Picture)” — Angel Haze feat. Ludacris
Where it plays: Title/branding placements and marketing tie-ins; non-diegetic.
Why it matters: An overt hype anthem that states the sequel’s louder, brighter mission.

“NRG (Skrillex, Kill The Noise, Milo & Otis Remix)” — Duck Sauce
Where it plays: Party/mosh sequences on campus; non-diegetic.
Why it matters: Break-neck tempo for sight-gag editing—pure kinetic glue.

“Get Up (Rattle) [feat. Far East Movement]” — Bingo Players
Where it plays: Crowd-energy montage; non-diegetic.
Why it matters: A call-and-response banger that syncs to group chaos and quick cuts.

“Freak (feat. Steve Bays)” — Steve Aoki & Shaun Frank
Where it plays: Late mosh-pit stretch; non-diegetic (WhatSong documents this placement).

Score cue suite — Mark Mothersbaugh
Where it plays: Action set-pieces (truck gunfight; spring-break pursuit); non-diegetic.
Why it matters: Tight rhythmic writing sells real stakes under the comedy surface.

Track–Moment Index (compact)
Song/CueScene / DescriptionDiegetic?Approx. Time
“22 Jump Street (Theme…)” — Angel Haze ft. LudacrisMain-title & promo tie-insNo
“NRG (Skrillex…Remix)” — Duck SauceCampus party/mosh beatsNo
“Get Up (Rattle)” — Bingo Players ft. Far East MovementMontage — spring-break chaosNo
“Freak (feat. Steve Bays)” — Steve Aoki & Shaun FrankThird song in mosh fight (documented)No
Score action cues — Mark MothersbaughTruck gunfight / finale pursuitNo

Music–Story Links (characters & plot beats)

  • When Schmidt & Jenko “split,” the score pares back to nervy synth ostinatos—smaller textures for smaller horizons.
  • Big drops return as the duo realigns; the film treats EDM as victory confetti—friendship laid over four-on-the-floor.
  • Hip-hop swagger tracks (Wiz Khalifa, Diplo) underline the heroes’ bluff—confidence first, competence later.
International trailer still with the duo crossing a beach stage as fireworks pop
International Trailer — beach-stage mayhem

How It Was Made (supervision, score, behind-the-scenes)

Directors Phil Lord & Christopher Miller wanted a louder, festival-leaning needle-drop palette to lampoon college-movie excess; music supervisor Kier Lehman sourced a club-ready set while Mothersbaugh expanded his 21 Jump Street motifs into a more electronic action fabric. The official score album arrived first as a limited 2-CD from La-La Land (paired with the first film), then digitally via Madison Gate Records. (as reported by Film Music Reporter and label/retail pages)

Reception & Quotes

The compilation did real business for a comedy sequel—showing up on UK and U.S. soundtrack charts—while fans called out the film-only bangers that didn’t make the retail cut. (according to the Official Charts Company)

“Mark Mothersbaugh’s scores for ‘21 Jump Street’ and ‘22 Jump Street’ released [as a 2-CD set].” Film Music Reporter
“Music supervisor Kier Lehman…collaborations with Phil Lord & Chris Miller on 21 Jump Street and 22 Jump Street.” Industry bio / interview features

Technical Info

  • Title: 22 Jump Street (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)
  • Year: 2014
  • Type: Movie
  • Composer (score): Mark Mothersbaugh
  • Music Supervision: Kier Lehman
  • Labels: Republic Records (songs compilation); La-La Land Records (limited 2-CD score incl. 21JS); Madison Gate Records (digital score)
  • Album status: Songs album (13 tracks) + separate score release; not all film-used songs appear on the retail compilation
  • Chart notes: UK Official Soundtrack Albums peak just outside Top 10; U.S. chart entries across Billboard categories (as stated by the Official Charts Company and trade listings)
  • Representative album cuts: Wiz Khalifa “Work Hard, Play Hard”; Duck Sauce “NRG (Skrillex/Kill The Noise/Milo & Otis Remix)”; Bingo Players “Get Up (Rattle) [feat. Far East Movement]”; Steve Aoki x Diplo x Deorro “Freak”; Travis Barker “Live Forever (feat. Juicy J & Liz)”

Canonical Entities & Relations

SubjectRelationObject
Phil Lord & Christopher Millerdirected22 Jump Street (2014)
Mark Mothersbaughcomposed score for22 Jump Street
Republic Recordsreleased22 Jump Street (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) — songs
La-La Land Recordsreleased22 & 21 Jump Street — limited 2-CD score
Madison Gate Recordsreleased22 Jump Street (Original Motion Picture Score) — digital
Kier Lehmanmusic supervision on22 Jump Street
Angel Haze feat. Ludacrisperformed“22 Jump Street (Theme from the Motion Picture)”

Sources: Apple Music; Spotify; Official Charts Company; Film Music Reporter; IMDb (soundtracks & full credits); Madison Gate Records; Discogs; WhatSong; ScreenRant.

The film, which has two parts. With a total budget of USD 107 million, it gained USD 533 million. It is a tremendous commercial success, which brought not only bigger fame to its main actors – Channing Tatum and Jonah Hill, but also a lot of money to them, because both were its producers. Channing Tatum recently is in demand. In the last year, at least 4 films appeared with his participation in the title role. And a minimum 1 has been planned for 2016, which is now in post-production stage. The plot of this film continues the storyline begun by its predecessor. With minor variations, which only add spice to the action. At this time, friends go to college, where they immediately revealed and their plan becomes almost to the brink of collapse. In addition, the hero of Tatum meets very similar person to him and he starts to think seriously about that and even of to go out of it all and to go to the college, where so many of his associates are. In the meantime, our heroic duo gets into various comic situations and begins to be in attention of also not completely adequate director of educational facility, which promises to give them problems that they do not need. Nice story, charismatic and charming main heroes, unrestrained atmosphere of fun student community – all this makes the film worthy of its box office, stepped the mark of USD 300 M. Wiz Khalifa doing rap, Duck Sauce – dance. In general, all the direction of the collection is very full of dance compositions that seemed to compete with each other in rampant. Just like Express Yourself, in where there is twerk and bright music. Live Forever and Check My Steezo – the brightest representatives of the genre on the tempo, rhythm and fire. For mood, we give the collection an assessment as 9 out of 10.

October, 22nd 2025

More info: Wikipedia, IMDb
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