WaterTower Music has released a new soundtrack album for the Netflix original series The Sandman. The album features selections of the original music from the show’s second and final season composed by David Buckley (The Good Wife, Papillon, The Forbidden Kingdom, Nobody, Angel Has Fallen, Evil, Greenland, The Stranger). Visit Amazon or any other digital music services to stream/download the soundtrack and listen to the composer’s first score track and The Song of Orpheus after the jump. The label has previously released an album featuring Buckley’s music from Season 1 back in 2022. The Sandman is developed Neil Gaiman, Allan Heinberg & David S. Goyer based Gaiman’s DC comic book series of the same title and stars Tom Sturridge, Kirby Howell-Baptiste, Mason Alexander Park, Esmé Creed-Miles, Donna Preston, Adrian Lester, Patton Oswalt, Barry Sloane, Vivienne Acheampong, Jenna Coleman, Gwendoline Christie, Stephen Fry, Asim Chaudhry, Ann Skelly, Jack Gleeson, Douglas Booth, Indya Moore, Steve Coogan and Boyd Holbrook.The first part of the second season of the fantasy drama premiered earlier this month and the second part is premiering this Thursday exclusively on Netflix.
Here’s the track list of the album:
1. A Family Gathering (4:30)
2. The Stage Is Set (2:29)
3. Lord Morpheus Bids You Welcome (3:35)
4. The Song of Orpheus (Choral Version) (1:40)
5. I Should Have Died Long Ago (4:26)
6. The Age of Fire and Flame (4:50)
7. The Dancing Woman (feat. Azam Ali) (1:45)
8. Isn’t Love Wonderful? (1:58)
9. How Now, Mad Spirit? (3:00)
10. The Reckoning (4:26)
11. Nuala’s Glamour (1:28)
12. Thermidor (4:23)
13. Queen of the First People (feat. Loire Cotler) (6:21)
14. A Pumpkin with a Gun (3:42)
15. Processional: The Endless (1:40)
16. No Longer the Same (4:26)
17. The Soul of Henrietta (3:59)
18. Not Even in My Dreams (2:44)
19. Any Number of Destinies (4:13)
20. Absent Friends, Lost Loves & Old Gods (4:01)
21. Your Time Has Come (2:34)
22. It Is at an End (2:22)
23. When I’m Gone – Liminal & Austin Fray (1:55)
24. The Song of Orpheus – Ruairi O’Connor (1:57)