"Bodies Bodies Bodies" Soundtrack Lyrics
Movie • 2022
Track Listing
COBRAH
Cecile Believe
Regard
Slayyyter
Alice Longyu Gao
Shygirl
Tyga
Azealia Banks
Delegation
Alice Longyu Gao
Brooke Candy
Kilo Kish
Tommy Genesis
Tommy Genesis
Brooke Candy
Princess Nokia
Shygirl
Charli XCX
Lakeyah
Megan Thee Stallion
"Bodies Bodies Bodies" Soundtrack Description
Questions and Answers
- Is there an official soundtrack album?
- Yes. A24 Music released the official score album by Disasterpeace on August 10, 2022; Charli XCX’s “Hot Girl (Bodies Bodies Bodies)” was released as a single beforehand.
- What is the Charli XCX song everyone mentions?
- “Hot Girl (Bodies Bodies Bodies),” a gleefully bratty theme co-created with George Daniel of The 1975; it plays over the end credits.
- Who composed the score?
- Rich Vreeland, a.k.a. Disasterpeace, whose synth-forward cues needle the paranoia and humor of the hurricane party.
- Who was the music supervisor?
- Meghan Currier, guiding the needle-drops toward a women-led, club-leaning palette that feels authentically Gen-Z.
- Where can I stream the music?
- The score is on major platforms via A24 Music; A24 also curated an official playlist that mixes the score with the film’s needle-drops.
- What song scores the TikTok-with-Greg gag?
- “Bored in the House” (Tyga with Curtis Roach) underscores the social-media moment and reappears in the second end-credit slot.
Notes & Trivia
- Charli XCX’s single “Hot Girl (Bodies Bodies Bodies)” was written to echo the characters’ self-mythologizing confidence (as reported by Pitchfork).
- The official A24 playlist pairs Disasterpeace’s score with club-adjacent bangers by Shygirl, Princess Nokia, Slayyyter, and more.
- Meghan Currier’s supervision leans heavily toward women-led rap and electro-pop—mirroring the film’s friend-group dynamics (according to Wikipedia’s production notes).
- A24 issued the soundtrack on “glow stick” green/violet vinyl, cheekily nodding to the movie’s glowstick-lit visuals.
- Disasterpeace recorded a tight, 9-cue score—short, nervy, and deliberately sparse to leave room for overlapping dialogue and party diegetics (as outlined by Film Music Reporter).
Overview
Why does a house lit by glowsticks feel louder than a nightclub? Because every whisper and side-eye lands like a kick drum. Bodies Bodies Bodies drapes its hurricane-party whodunit in synth pulses and club cuts that flex, tease, and—crucially—betray. The soundtrack isn’t just trendy; it’s situational, toggling between diegetic party music and tight, minimalist score that lets accusations ricochet through the mansion.
Disasterpeace—famed for It Follows—trades doom-drone for razor blips and negative space. Around that spine, the needle-drops swagger: Slayyyter’s “Daddy AF” blasting at arrival, Azealia’s “212” powering a euphoric dance crest, Delegation’s “Oh Honey” soaking a face-mask bit with ironic smoothness. Then Charli XCX swings the door shut with “Hot Girl,” an anthem that reframes the chaos as a flex. It’s a soundtrack of image management: what you play when you’re sure you’re winning.
Genres & Themes
- Electro-pop & hyperpop edges ↔ curated personas; the crew performs confidence while everything cracks.
- Club rap & trap ↔ dominance games; tracks score who’s “up” in the friend-economy at any moment.
- 70s sophisti-soul (“Oh Honey”) ↔ irony; soft focus over sharp knives.
- Minimal synth score ↔ suspicion as texture; Disasterpeace uses silence and jitter to amplify side-eyes.
Key Tracks & Scenes
“Daddy AF” — Slayyyter
Where it plays: Bee and Sophie pull up to the mansion; the party apparatus spins up (diegetic, over speakers).
Why it matters: Announces the house’s pecking order—swagger first, sincerity later. (Scene placement documented by WhatSong.)
“212” — Azealia Banks feat. Lazy Jay
Where it plays: Everybody erupts into a dance jag; momentum crests before the game turns nasty (diegetic).
Why it matters: Peak vibe before suspicion; a pressure valve that slams shut the second bodies drop. (WhatSong notes the party-dance use.)
“Bored in the House” — Tyga & Curtis Roach
Where it plays: TikTok gag with Greg; reprises in the second end-credit slot (diegetic, then credits).
Why it matters: Pandemic-era meme energy, weaponized to roast their own performative boredom. (WhatSong cites the scene and credit usage.)
“Oh Honey” — Delegation
Where it plays: Greg reclines with a light-therapy mask, luxuriating while chaos percolates elsewhere (diegetic).
Why it matters: Silk-soul counterpoint that heightens the film’s catty comedy. (Scene description logged by WhatSong.)
“Secrets” — Regard
Where it plays: Over Alice’s podcast intro and character framing (diegetic).
Why it matters: Sets up how everyone brands themselves—even their “authenticity” has a beat. (Per WhatSong’s scene note.)
“Hot Girl (Bodies Bodies Bodies)” — Charli XCX
Where it plays: End credits (non-diegetic).
Why it matters: A last laugh. The song reframes the bloodbath as a “we’re still iconic” exit line; George Daniel’s production keeps it strutting. (Pitchfork and NME confirm release/context.)
Music–Story Links (characters & plot beats)
- When Bee crosses the threshold to “Daddy AF,” the cue telegraphs her outsider status: the mansion runs on bravado she hasn’t mastered—yet.
- “212” marks the film’s emotional zenith; after that drop, every subsequent silence feels accusatory. Disasterpeace then slides in with brittle pulses to score blame-trading.
- Greg’s “Oh Honey” moment literalizes disconnect: spa vibes while trust erodes—soundtracking privilege as insulation.
- “Bored in the House” doubles as commentary: they’re never truly bored; they’re performing boredom for each other (and for us).
- End-credit “Hot Girl” snaps the narrative shut with an image-first mantra, echoing how status is the real knife in this friend group.
How It Was Made (supervision, score, behind-the-scenes)
Disasterpeace composed a lean, nine-cue score—recorded to leave oxygen for overlapping dialogue and chaotic diegetics. The album rolled out digitally via A24 Music on August 10, 2022, with a curated A24 playlist bundling the score and party cuts (according to Film Music Reporter and A24’s materials).
Meghan Currier’s supervision leans into female-forward club rap and electro-pop—Shygirl, Princess Nokia, Slayyyter, Brooke Candy—calibrated to read as the characters’ taste rather than a music-department flex (as noted in production credits and Wikipedia). Charli XCX was invited specifically to bottle that “I’m winning” energy; “Hot Girl” arrived first as a single, co-produced by George Daniel (as stated by Pitchfork and Rolling Stone UK).
Reception & Quotes
“Charli XCX shares new track ‘Hot Girl’, serving as the theme for A24’s slasher and produced with The 1975’s George Daniel.” — Rolling Stone UK
“‘Hot Girl’ was commissioned to capture the spirit of the film’s rich twenty-somethings—swaggering even as things spiral.” — Pitchfork
Fans and reviewers clocked how the needle-drops feel plausibly “on phone,” then evaporate to silence while Disasterpeace’s synths stoke suspicion. Vinyl collectors got a cheeky glowstick-colored edition, while digital listeners received the compact score release day-and-date with expansion.
Technical Info
- Title: Bodies Bodies Bodies
- Year: 2022
- Type: movie
- Score Composer: Disasterpeace (Rich Vreeland)
- Music Supervisor: Meghan Currier
- Theme / Key Single: “Hot Girl (Bodies Bodies Bodies)” — Charli XCX (prod. with George Daniel)
- Label / Release: A24 Music — digital score released Aug 10, 2022; “Hot Girl” single released late July 2022; A24 issued a colored-vinyl edition bundling score + selections.
- Selected notable placements: “Daddy AF” (arrival); “212” (dance peak); “Oh Honey” (Greg’s mask); “Bored in the House” (TikTok + end credits); “Hot Girl” (end credits).
- Availability: Streaming on major DSPs; A24 playlist collates score and needle-drops.
Canonical Entities & Relations
| Subject | Relation | Object |
|---|---|---|
| Halina Reijn | directed | Bodies Bodies Bodies (film) |
| Disasterpeace (Rich Vreeland) | composed score for | Bodies Bodies Bodies (film) |
| Charli XCX | performed theme song for | Bodies Bodies Bodies (film) |
| George Daniel | co-produced | “Hot Girl (Bodies Bodies Bodies)” |
| Meghan Currier | supervised music for | Bodies Bodies Bodies (film) |
| A24 Music | released | Bodies Bodies Bodies (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) |
| Shygirl / Princess Nokia / Slayyyter | featured as | needle-drop artists in film |
Sources: Pitchfork; Rolling Stone UK; Film Music Reporter; Wikipedia (film/music section); WhatSong / Tunefind-style listings; A24 official playlist and shop.
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