Soundtracks:  A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z #


Bosco Album Cover

"Bosco" Soundtrack Lyrics

Movie • 2024

Track Listing



"Bosco" Soundtrack Description

Bosco (2024) official Peacock trailer still featuring Tyrese Gibson and the prison setting
Bosco — official trailer still, 2024 (Peacock)

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)
Trailer frame showing the prison corridor as the film’s percussive beats rise
Concrete, cameras, and a low boom: the music keeps the pressure up between escapes and setbacks.

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.
Trailer montage: close-ups of hands, locks, and notes set to a pulsing cue
Minimal motifs, maximum nerve: the score’s pulse tracks each micro-decision.

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)
SongScene / MomentDiegetic?Approx. TimingNotes
Bosco Freestyle (Compton) — The GamePrep & planning montageNoMid-filmSide B anchor
Make It Back — French Montana, DDG & WHOISTEVENYOUNGCross-cutting hustle sequenceNoMid-lateGoal-stated hook underlines theme
87 Cutlass — The Game, Ray Vaughn & Big DukeMovement / relocation beatNoLate-filmMuscle-car metaphor for momentum
Love You More — Snoop DoggReflection on relationshipsNoEarly-midSide A texture shift
6 Feet — East Side K-Boy, Jason Martin & Dave EastTension spike / threat reminderNoVariableListed 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.
Trailer image of Bosco staring through bars while a low, ticking cue plays
When the beat drops out, the score tells you what the face can’t say.

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

SubjectRelationObject
Nicholas Manuel Pinowrote & directedBosco (2024)
PeacockreleasedBosco (streaming, Feb 2, 2024)
JeMarcus (Jemarcus) BridgescomposedBosco original score
Blocc Boyz EntertainmentreleasedBosco Original Motion Picture Soundtrack — Side A & Side B (2024)
The Gameperformed“Bosco Freestyle (Compton)”; “87 Cutlass” (with Ray Vaughn & Big Duke)
Snoop Doggperformed“Love You More” (Side A)
French Montanaperformed“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.

October, 25th 2025


A-Z Lyrics Universe

Lyrics / song texts are property and copyright of their owners and provided for educational purposes only.