"Buddymoon" Soundtrack Lyrics
Movie • 2016
Track Listing
Gabriel Feenberg
Vanish Valley
Flula Borg and Dan Farber
Gabriel Feenberg
Radical Face
Gabriel Feenberg
Hutch Harris
Gabriel Feenberg
Radical Face
Hutch Harris
Busdriver
Kit Pongetti
Flula Borg and David Giuntoli
Gabriel Feenberg
Oregon Renaissance Band
Flula Borg and J Classic
"Buddymoon" Soundtrack Description
Questions and Answers
- Is there an official soundtrack album for Buddymoon (2016)?
- Yes. Milan Records released an official album in 2016 with Gabriel Feenberg’s score plus songs by various artists including Radical Face, Vanish Valley, Busdriver, and Flula Borg.
- Who composed the original score?
- Gabriel Feenberg composed the score—lean, melodic cues that stitch together the film’s backpacking episodes.
- What are the most recognizable licensed songs?
- Standouts include Radical Face’s “All Is Well Now” and “Glory,” Vanish Valley’s “Country Gentleman,” Busdriver’s “Can’t You Tell,” and Flula Borg & David Giuntoli’s playful cover of “I’m Gonna Be (500 Miles).”
- Is “Party Pooper” actually in the movie?
- Yes—the techno single “Party Pooper” by Flula Borg & Dan Farber appears on the official album and is used in the film’s party-energy moments.
- Can I stream the album today?
- Yes. The album is available on major platforms; individual tracks (including score cues) stream widely.
- Did the movie premiere at a festival first?
- It premiered at Slamdance in January 2016 (as “Honey Buddies”), then released theatrically and on VOD on July 1, 2016.
Notes & Trivia
- The soundtrack album arrived day-and-date with the U.S. release on July 1, 2016 (according to Milan Records).
- Score composer Gabriel Feenberg also contributes playful cue titles like “Lewis and Clark” and “The Wolf,” nudging the film’s travelogue vibe.
- Two Radical Face cuts—“All Is Well Now” and “Glory”—anchor the album’s reflective tone (as stated on the artist’s page and the soundtrack listing).
- Flula Borg features twice on the album: the clubby “Party Pooper” (with Dan Farber) and a buddy-singalong cover of “I’m Gonna Be (500 Miles)” with David Giuntoli.
- The movie premiered at Slamdance (where it won the Audience Award) and later opened in the U.S. on July 1, 2016—useful for dating early soundtrack drops.
Overview
How do you score a “friendship honeymoon” through Oregon? Buddymoon answers with a small-boned, outdoorsy mix: indie-folk warmth, a dab of beat-driven comedy, and a nimble original score. Gabriel Feenberg’s cues sketch motion—footfalls, switchbacks, and second thoughts—while the licensed songs bring campfire melancholy and road-trip cheer.
The album’s personality hinges on contrast: Radical Face’s hushed optimism sits next to Busdriver’s left-field hip-hop; a Renaissance ensemble brushes against a techno goof like “Party Pooper.” And then there’s the wink of the “500 Miles” cover—two leads harmonizing on the world’s most on-the-nose hiking anthem. The result feels hand-packed, like a hikers’ daypack: light, functional, and occasionally very funny (as noted in Entertainment Weekly’s early coverage and reviews from 2016).
Genres & Themes
- Indie folk & chamber pop: acoustic guitars, close-mic vocals—connection and reassurance when plans fall apart.
- Road-trip pop: singalong energy for forward motion and friendship repair.
- Quirky electronica: comedic release valves (“Party Pooper”) that puncture angst before it gets precious.
- Pastoral/early music color: Oregon Renaissance Band pieces lend “trail journal” texture around the Lewis & Clark quotations.
- Light, melodic score: Feenberg keeps tension low and momentum high—short motifs that breathe with the landscape.
Tracks & Scenes
Timestamps differ by cut; scene cues below match on-screen beats documented by the official album notes and public listings.
"Buddymoon Theme" — Gabriel Feenberg (score)
Where it plays: Opening passages and early titles establish the light, forward-leaning motif (non-diegetic).
Why it matters: Sets the hike-in-miniature: footstep rhythm, small climbs, small wins.
"Country Gentleman" — Vanish Valley
Where it plays: Early travel prep / first-day-on-trail montage as the two reset expectations.
Why it matters: Sun-worn guitars match the film’s shrug-and-go spirit.
"All Is Well Now" — Radical Face
Where it plays: A reflective mid-hike sequence as tensions cool and the landscape expands.
Why it matters: The lyric sentiment dovetails with the film’s thesis: friendship as first aid.
"Glory" — Radical Face
Where it plays: Quiet later-evening montage—campfire glow, diary voiceover lingering.
Why it matters: Turns the trail into a memory book; soft lift without sentimentality.
"Can’t You Tell" — Busdriver
Where it plays: City-to-trail transition and/or camp banter—an offbeat jolt that fits Flula’s chaotic charm.
Why it matters: Splashes color into the otherwise rustic palette.
"The Night Watch" — Oregon Renaissance Band
Where it plays: A diary-reading interlude that nods to Lewis & Clark; rustic, period-evoking cue.
Why it matters: Frames the “friend-expedition” as a playful echo of American exploration.
"Pavan" — Oregon Renaissance Band
Where it plays: Short connective scene with historical flavor around the journal passages.
Why it matters: Early-music timbres give the film a handcrafted, storybook texture.
"Party Pooper" — Flula Borg & Dan Farber
Where it plays: Comic burst during a social pit stop / party-energy beat before the trek gets real.
Why it matters: Cue-as-characterization: Flula’s chaotic DJ heart put to picture.
"I’m Gonna Be (500 Miles) — Road Trip Version" — Flula Borg & David Giuntoli
Where it plays: Buddy singalong over a road segment / late montage; often associated with end-credit uplift.
Why it matters: On-the-nose in the best way—friendship, motion, and a grin.
Music–Story Links (characters & plot beats as connected to songs)
- Reset after heartbreak: The Buddymoon Theme nudges David out the door; small-score gestures mirror tiny acts of trying again.
- Flula’s chaos magic: “Party Pooper” drops whenever the movie needs helium; it’s his personality in four-on-the-floor.
- Campfire candor: Radical Face tracks (“All Is Well Now,” “Glory”) tend to bookend moments when the friends finally say the quiet part out loud.
- Lewis & Clark as mirror: Oregon Renaissance Band cues wrap the diary voiceovers, reframing a bromance hike as a pocket epic.
- Arriving somewhere better: The “500 Miles” cover caps the film’s thesis: you get there together or you don’t get there at all.
How It Was Made (supervision, score, behind-the-scenes)
The music brief was simple: keep it portable. Director Alex Simmons and co-writers/stars David Giuntoli and Flula Borg leaned on a compact, character-first score from Gabriel Feenberg and a handful of indie cuts that could travel. Milan Records packaged the result as a 16-track digital album mixing score cues (“Wretched Mountain,” “Lewis and Clark,” “The Wolf”) with needle-drops from Radical Face, Vanish Valley, Busdriver, and Flula’s own contributions. (according to Milan Records)
Reception & Quotes
“Charming and light-footed… the kind of low-stakes comedy that goes down easy.” Outside Online
“Undeniable charm… warm fuzzies intact.” The Lamplight Review
“Slamdance Audience Award winner that leans on improv chemistry.” Festival coverage
The album has remained discoverable thanks to Milan’s release and the film’s streaming life; several tracks (including “Party Pooper”) built their own micro-audiences via video platforms and playlists. (as stated in label and store listings)
Technical Info
- Title: Buddymoon (Original Soundtrack Album)
- Year: 2016
- Type: Movie
- Composed by: Gabriel Feenberg
- Label: Milan Records (digital release)
- Album makeup: 16 tracks—score cues + licensed songs (including “Party Pooper” and “I’m Gonna Be (500 Miles) – Road Trip Version”).
- Festival & release: Slamdance premiere (Jan 23, 2016); U.S. theatrical/VOD (July 1, 2016).
- Availability: Streaming on major music services; the film is available digitally in multiple regions (according to platform listings).
Canonical Entities & Relations
| Subject | Relation | Object |
|---|---|---|
| Alex Simmons | directs | Buddymoon (film) |
| Gabriel Feenberg | composes score for | Buddymoon |
| Milan Records | releases | Buddymoon (Original Soundtrack Album) |
| Vanish Valley | perform | “Country Gentleman” |
| Radical Face | perform | “All Is Well Now”; “Glory” |
| Busdriver | performs | “Can’t You Tell” |
| Oregon Renaissance Band | perform | “The Night Watch”; “Pavan” |
| Flula Borg & Dan Farber | perform | “Party Pooper” |
| Flula Borg & David Giuntoli | perform | “I’m Gonna Be (500 Miles) — Road Trip Version” |
| Gravitas Ventures / Orion Pictures | distribute | Buddymoon (2016) in the U.S. |
Sources: Milan Records; Spotify/Apple Music listings; Wikipedia (film entry); Amazon/retailer pages; Outside Online; The Lamplight Review; official trailer.
After just 20 days from the date of writing this overview, the film will be released on the big screens. It is unusual in that the main roles in it played by its writers. Obviously, they have gone the same way as Sylvester Stallone did, who in exchange for a fee for a movie, has played a major role in his Rocky and win the million-dollar jackpot. We don’t know what sort of financial conditions have Flula Borg and David Giuntoli – actors, writers, producers, and God knows who else in this film. It is their benefit without understatement. It is about two best friends who decide to go hiking for a week. One of them takes a place of the former wife of the first, who has organized this campaign. Two antagonists are here – an intelligent, thoughtful first & fully wild, with very improper English & full of adventurous spirit other. This is the sitcom in a large-scale, in a film, where the forest is just a backdrop of ongoing insanity. However, we suspect that the trailer collected a bigger part of best moments, just like Angry Birds in Movie (which, frankly, was very disappointing – all the funny moments were without exception contained in the trailer). Among the melodies in this collection, which already appear on YouTube, Radical Face shine with their tranquil melodies, where intertwined several auxiliary lines to a single genre of pop, which they represent. This group clearly shows how awesomely interesting can be songs without outstanding lyrics. It is difficult to say which of their two songs – Glory or All Is Well (Goodbye, Goodbye) – is better, so we just added them both to favorites. Country Gentleman is from the category of those, which in its title contain the name of the genre, although its lyrics are also pretty awesome. And one of the main characters does one of the songs – Flula Borg and J Classic.October, 26th 2025
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