"Bosco" Soundtrack Lyrics
Movie • 2024
Track Listing
"Bosco" Soundtrack Description
Questions and Answers
- Is there an official soundtrack album for Bosco?
- Yes. Two companion albums—Bosco (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) – Side A and Side B—arrived in late 2024, collecting the film’s hip-hop cuts and originals. (as stated on Apple Music)
- Who appears on the soundtrack?
- Snoop Dogg, The Game, French Montana, DDG, RJmrLA, The Game & Ray Vaughn (on “87 Cutlass”), Reekado Banks, Jaywillz and more. (according to Film Music Reporter)
- Who composed the original score?
- JeMarcus (a.k.a. Jemarcus) Bridges composed the score; a dedicated score album followed in 2025. (as listed on Apple Music)
- When and where did the film release?
- Bosco premiered February 2, 2024, streaming on Peacock. (according to Peacock’s announcement)
- Is the soundtrack streaming now?
- Yes. Both Side A and Side B are available on major services (Apple Music, Spotify, Amazon Music).
- Does the movie use licensed songs beyond the album cuts?
- Yes—cue sheets include rap collabs and needle-drops like “6 Feet” (East Side K-Boy, Jason Martin & Dave East). (per IMDb Soundtracks)
Notes & Trivia
- Two-part drop: Side A bowed September 27, 2024; Side B followed in October 2024. (as stated on Apple Music and Spotify)
- Hip-hop bench: Peacock’s trailer rollout name-checked Snoop Dogg, French Montana, The Game and DDG as contributors. (according to Peacock’s press post)
- Lead cuts people search for: “Bosco Freestyle (Compton)” (The Game), “Make It Back” (French Montana, DDG & WHOISTEVENYOUNG), “87 Cutlass” (The Game, Ray Vaughn & Big Duke). (Film Music Reporter)
- Score later, not sooner: the original score album by JeMarcus Bridges landed mid-2025, after the film’s streaming debut. (as stated on Apple Music)
- Label & imprint: the soundtrack releases are credited to Blocc Boyz Entertainment with artist/producer features across both sides. (Apple Music)
Overview
How do you score a prison-break true story without sandblasting the human parts? Bosco splits the job in two. The needle-drop albums (Side A / Side B) handle muscle and momentum—hard-edged rap, West Coast bass, Afrobeats-tinged grooves—while JeMarcus Bridges’ score stitches the personal: slow-burn pads, tense ostinatos, and reflective interludes. (according to Film Music Reporter; as stated on Apple Music)
The album concept mirrors the film’s arc from inner-city bravado to methodical resolve. Side A leans on global flavors alongside marquee names; Side B tightens around Compton-centric street realism. It’s an “inspired by and from the film” approach that plays like a gym playlist one minute and a heist primer the next. (according to Peacock’s trailer notes)
Genres & Themes
- West Coast & drill-adjacent rap — propulsion for planning beats and face-offs; swagger as survival.
- Melodic trap & R&B hooks — relief valves for family flashbacks and calls home.
- Afrobeats / diasporic pop touches — Side A’s color; signals the story’s wider community beyond the cell block.
- Suspense score — Bridges’ cues use low synths and ticking percussion to chart anxiety, then widen into hopeful codas.
Key Tracks & Scenes
“Bosco Freestyle (Compton)” — The Game
Where it plays: Used around planning/identity beats; album standout on Side B (non-diegetic).
Why it matters: Ground-level Compton DNA—stamps the story’s origins and street calculus. (according to Film Music Reporter)
“Make It Back” — French Montana, DDG & WHOISTEVENYOUNG
Where it plays: Montage/transition energy; on Side B.
Why it matters: Hooks meet hustle; the title doubles as the character’s stated goal. (Film Music Reporter)
“87 Cutlass” — The Game, Ray Vaughn & Big Duke
Where it plays: Hype cue for movement sequences; Side B highlight.
Why it matters: Old-school car, new-school threat—the groove telegraphs motion. (Film Music Reporter)
“Love You More” — Snoop Dogg
Where it plays: Side A mood-setter with softer edges during relationship/family memory beats.
Why it matters: A respite track—humanizes the lead between schemes. (as listed on Apple Music)
“6 Feet” — East Side K-Boy, Jason Martin & Dave East
Where it plays: Licensed in-film needle-drop underscoring menace.
Why it matters: Lyrical imagery mirrors the stakes of failure. (per IMDb Soundtracks)
Track–Moment Index (selected)
| Song | Scene / Moment | Diegetic? | Approx. Timing | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bosco Freestyle (Compton) — The Game | Prep & planning montage | No | Mid-film | Side B anchor |
| Make It Back — French Montana, DDG & WHOISTEVENYOUNG | Cross-cutting hustle sequence | No | Mid-late | Goal-stated hook underlines theme |
| 87 Cutlass — The Game, Ray Vaughn & Big Duke | Movement / relocation beat | No | Late-film | Muscle-car metaphor for momentum |
| Love You More — Snoop Dogg | Reflection on relationships | No | Early-mid | Side A texture shift |
| 6 Feet — East Side K-Boy, Jason Martin & Dave East | Tension spike / threat reminder | No | Variable | Listed in film’s soundtrack credits |
Music–Story Links (characters & plot beats as connected to songs)
- Identity as engine: The Game’s cuts plant Bosco’s roots; when the plan crystallizes, the rhythm tightens to match his focus.
- Hope in the margins: Smoother hooks (Snoop, Afrobeats-leaning features) slide in when the script checks on love, loyalty, or faith.
- Consequences in 4/4: Menacing tracks like “6 Feet” become sonic memento mori—every risk has a cost.
- Score as inner voice: Bridges’ cues trade bravado for breath, mapping fear, patience, and the slow turn toward escape.
How It Was Made (supervision, score, behind-the-scenes)
Peacock’s roll-out positioned hip-hop veterans alongside emerging voices—an “in and around the film” stack led by Snoop Dogg and The Game. Side A mixes global flavors; Side B leans street and Compton-centric. (according to Peacock’s trailer notes and Film Music Reporter)
Composer JeMarcus (Jemarcus) Bridges built a low-end, pulse-driven score that complements the rap selections without duplicating them; his standalone score album followed in July 2025. (as stated on Apple Music and FilmMusic.com)
Reception & Quotes
The film’s music conversation centered on the two-part album drop and the roster of contributors, with playlist traction helping discovery on streaming. (according to Apple Music editorial and Film Music Reporter)
“Leading hip-hop artists including Snoop Dogg, French Montana, The Game, and DDG will lend original music to the film.” Peacock (press post)
“Two soundtrack albums—Side A and Side B—collect original songs and features tied to the film.” Film Music Reporter
Availability: Both soundtrack sides stream widely; the 2025 score album is also available digitally. (as stated on Apple Music)
Technical Info
- Title: Bosco (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) — Side A & Side B
- Year: 2024 (film); 2024 (soundtrack sides); 2025 (original score album)
- Type: Movie soundtrack (various artists) + original score
- Composer: JeMarcus (Jemarcus) Bridges — Bosco (Original Motion Picture Score), digital release July 25, 2025
- Key artists (selected): Snoop Dogg; The Game; French Montana; DDG; RJmrLA; Ray Vaughn; Reekado Banks; Jaywillz
- Label / imprint: Blocc Boyz Entertainment (soundtrack sides)
- Release context: Film released on Peacock Feb 2, 2024
- Selected notable placements: “Bosco Freestyle (Compton)”; “Make It Back”; “87 Cutlass”; “Love You More”; “6 Feet”
Canonical Entities & Relations
| Subject | Relation | Object |
|---|---|---|
| Nicholas Manuel Pino | wrote & directed | Bosco (2024) |
| Peacock | released | Bosco (streaming, Feb 2, 2024) |
| JeMarcus (Jemarcus) Bridges | composed | Bosco original score |
| Blocc Boyz Entertainment | released | Bosco Original Motion Picture Soundtrack — Side A & Side B (2024) |
| The Game | performed | “Bosco Freestyle (Compton)”; “87 Cutlass” (with Ray Vaughn & Big Duke) |
| Snoop Dogg | performed | “Love You More” (Side A) |
| French Montana | performed | “Make It Back” (with DDG & WHOISTEVENYOUNG) |
Sources: Peacock (press post); Film Music Reporter; Apple Music; Spotify; IMDb (Soundtracks); Wikipedia (film); FilmMusic.com; Amazon Music editorial.
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