"Monster High 2" Soundtrack Lyrics
Movie • 2023
Track Listing
"Monster High 2 (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)" – Album Guide to Tracks and Key Scenes
Overview
What happens when sophomore year starts with a prophecy and a werecat rivalry? The sequel answers with compact, Broadway-bright numbers shaped for ensemble storytelling. Songs arrive fast, stick, and move the plot — a clean upgrade over the first film’s longer set pieces.
Arrival → adaptation → rebellion → collapse. An opener fuses pep-rally momentum with friendship vows; mid-act tunes reframe loyalty and secret identities; the third act flips into a unity anthem. The soundtrack stays under 30 minutes, which keeps energy high and scene-to-song transitions crisp.
Stylistically it’s pop-musical with light electro gloss: handclaps, synth brass, stacked harmonies. The album’s through-line is affirmation — “magic together” as a literal lyric and a story function. As per official album notes, the release is under Mattel’s imprint with Arts Music (WMG), and score duties stay with Sunna Wehrmeijer.
How It Was Made
Monster High 2 is a live-action musical sequel for Nickelodeon/Paramount+. Sunna Wehrmeijer returns as composer; Lindsay Wolfington handles music supervision. The 11-track songs album streeted alongside the U.S. premiere in October 2023, with a later 2024 compilation releasing selections of Wehrmeijer’s score from both movies. According to the studio’s listings, the songs are credited to the film’s lead cast with featured writers/producers on specific cuts; length is ~27 minutes.
Tracks & Scenes
Timings vary slightly by platform broadcast; below are anchored to the wide U.S. cut. Selections only — not the full album.
"My Heart Goes Boom Boom Boom" — Cast
Where it plays: Early welcome-back montage and hallway choreography as Clawdeen, Frankie, and Draculaura reunite and reset goals.
Why it matters: Stakes in 3 minutes — friendship, fame jitters, and a catchy statement of intent.
"One Moon, One Heart" — Miia Harris, Nayah Damasen & Ceci Balagot
Where it plays: Quiet confessional beat on the quad after rumors spread; a lunar metaphor ties the trio back together.
Why it matters: The record’s gentlest harmony writing — it deepens the trio bond.
"Make Your Own Way" — Tina Parol & Oh, Hush! (as featured performers in-film)
Where it plays: Training montage/“try, fail, fix” sequence when plans stall and a new approach is needed.
Why it matters: Momentum shot: verse/chorus economy matches the scene’s brisk edits.
"Reason We’ve Got Magic" — Nayah Damasen & Bonale Fambrini
Where it plays: Mid-film nudge toward embracing “different” as power; a small-room number that grows as others join.
Why it matters: States the thesis aloud — community over secrecy. The brief reprise marks a decision point.
"You Don’t Know" — Miia Harris, Salena Qureshi & Company
Where it plays: Toralei’s re-entry stirs conflict; the number pivots between boast and doubt across split locations.
Why it matters: Character friction track; gives the antagonist a musical stance without flattening her.
"Not How Our Story Goes" — Lead trio
Where it plays: Low point to rally — cutaways to each friend choosing action over rumor.
Why it matters: Refusal of an imposed narrative; melody lifts at the exact “rewrite” lyric.
"Together Forever" — FJØRA
Where it plays: Dance-floor/party cue that bridges from plot to celebration while subplots tie off.
Why it matters: A non-cast voice freshens the album’s timbre and gives the party a distinct color.
"Gotta Get There Together" — Lead trio
Where it plays: Final push toward the showdown; travel beats, quick handoffs, rising tempo.
Why it matters: The cleanest “mission” song — propulsive without losing warmth.
"Monsters Are" — Ensemble
Where it plays: Climactic unity piece; chorus expands as rivals drop grudges and the plan clicks.
Why it matters: Anthem function: folds side characters into the story’s “we.”
"Never Walk Alone" — Blue Sky Moon
Where it plays: End credits, first slot — the film exhales and lets a pop ballad carry the final message.
Why it matters: A warm coda that reads like fan-letter to the franchise.
Trailer music
The official trailers leaned on chorus stings from the opening and unity songs; edits emphasize handclaps, group hits, and chant-able hooks to telegraph ensemble focus.
Notes & Trivia
- The songs album runs 11 tracks (~27 minutes); label credit reads: ℗ Mattel Inc., under exclusive license to Arts Music (Warner Music Group).
- Score release: in 2024 a combined Original Score from Movies 1 + 2 album collected Sunna Wehrmeijer’s cues (~95 minutes total).
- Music supervision by Lindsay Wolfington — a frequent YA/TV musical hand.
- The movie premiered simultaneously on Paramount+ and Nickelodeon in the U.S. on October 5, 2023.
Music–Story Links
Peer pressure arrives as peppy chorus — easy to join, easy to resist once the lyric turns. Identity songs like “Reason We’ve Got Magic” let the characters define “monster” as community, not category. Antagonist energy gets melody (“You Don’t Know”) so the eventual truce can sing back to it. The rally numbers (“Gotta Get There Together,” “Monsters Are”) compress plot into a chorus the whole school can carry.
Reception & Quotes
Fans called the sequel’s music “shorter, punchier, catchier.” Trade capsules noted the clean TV mix and the cast’s improved ensemble blend.
“Hook density is high; almost every number advances something.”
— soundtrack column
“It knows it’s for kids and plays like it — bright, tight, rewatchable.”
— family-music round-up
Interesting Facts
- Several album cuts are ensemble-fronted; only one credits a non-cast lead (FJØRA) for a color change late in the film.
- The opener sets meter with claps and stomps so locker choreography can cut on the beat.
- Wolfington’s supervision balances cast vocals with external features, a common Nickelodeon model since the 2010s.
- The 2024 score release uses descriptive cue titles that map cleanly to scenes from both films.
- Streaming services list the 2023 songs album under “Monster High” as artist rather than individual cast billing.
Technical Info
- Title: Monster High 2 (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)
- Year/Label: 2023 — Mattel Inc. under exclusive license to Arts Music (WMG)
- Composer (score): Sunna Wehrmeijer
- Music Supervisor: Lindsay Wolfington
- Runtime / Tracks: ~27 minutes / 11 tracks (songs album)
- Selected placements (songs): “My Heart Goes Boom Boom Boom”; “One Moon, One Heart”; “Make Your Own Way”; “Reason We’ve Got Magic” (+ reprise); “You Don’t Know”; “Not How Our Story Goes”; “Together Forever”; “Gotta Get There Together”; “Monsters Are”; “Never Walk Alone”
- Film: Monster High 2 (2023) — dir. Todd Holland; released on Paramount+ & Nickelodeon (U.S.)
Questions & Answers
- Who composed the score for the sequel?
- Sunna Wehrmeijer returned from the first film; her cues are collected with Movie 1 in a 2024 score release.
- Is there a separate score album?
- Yes — Monster High: Original Score from Movies 1 + 2 compiles music from both films.
- Who oversaw the licensed music and song clearances?
- Lindsay Wolfington served as music supervisor.
- How many songs are on the 2023 album?
- Eleven, totaling just under half an hour.
- When did the movie and album drop?
- Both aligned with the U.S. premiere on October 5, 2023; the songs album went live the same day on major platforms.
Canonical Entities & Relations
| Subject | Relation | Object | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Monster High 2 (2023) | directed by | Todd Holland | Live-action musical sequel |
| Sunna Wehrmeijer | composed | Original score | Score album released 2024 (with Movie 1) |
| Lindsay Wolfington | music supervision | Monster High 2 | Licensed songs & clearances |
| Mattel Inc. | licensed to | Arts Music (WMG) | Album rights/label listing |
| Nickelodeon / Paramount+ | released | Monster High 2 | Oct 5, 2023 (U.S.) |
| FJØRA | performed | “Together Forever” | Non-cast feature |
| Blue Sky Moon | performed | “Never Walk Alone” | End-credits cut |
Sources: album listings on Apple/Spotify; film page and credits; music-team credits; score album announcement and release; community song breakdowns; official trailers.
November, 16th 2025
A-Z Lyrics Universe
Cynthia Erivo Popular
Ariana Grande Horsepower
Post Malone Ain't No Love in Oklahoma
Luke Combs Good Riddance (Time of Your Life)
Green Day Bye Bye Bye
*NSYNC You're the One That I Wan
John Travolta & Olivia Newton-John I Always Wanted a Brother
Braelyn Rankins, Theo Somolu, Kelvin Harrison Jr. and Aaron Pierre The Power of Love
Frankie Goes to Hollywood Beyond
Auli’i Cravalho feat. Rachel House MORE ›