@PSCENTRALย EVENT 49:ย LITERATURE
Music in Film: Project Hail Mary (2026) dir. Phil Lord and Christopher Miller Original score by Daniel Pemberton

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@PSCENTRALย EVENT 49:ย LITERATURE
Music in Film: Project Hail Mary (2026) dir. Phil Lord and Christopher Miller Original score by Daniel Pemberton

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Do you ever listen to โTime Go Fishingโ from the PHM soundtrack and listen to the clap and body instrument in that score, increasing and increasing, building pressure, but itโs also a clear encouragement to Grace, to the Hail Mary, to the mission. Itโs the cry and heartbeat of thousands from Earth and Erid, wishing them well. Yeah. (This was intentional by Daniel Pemberton btw. You should listen to it again for it.)
I've been listening to the PHM soundtrack on repeat these last few months, and I love all the songs (for example, Centrifuge is a bop and no-one can tell me otherwise), but Grace Go Home exists on its own level of genius I think. and yes, I will elaborate.
the music sets in at the exact moment Rocky asks "so, Grace die, question" and at the start it's these lonely double heartbeats with no anchor and so much near-silence in between that they just float through empty space (pun intended). the change starts as soon as Rocky says "Rocky watch crew die. Could not fix. Grace say Grace will die. Rocky fix", and slowly but surely the heartbeats become steady and solid, from then on consistently underpinning the music. and the strings set in and suddenly there is substance to the music again. And then when Rocky says "Grace go home" the choir starts, human voices in the music that literally call grace home to his own planet, which is so freaking powerful. The music then softens when Grace goes into the hug, and when Rocky thumps against the glass in reply, it's like the choir exhales one final time as if in relief.
And I'm sure someone with more musical knowledge will know whether the chords switch from minor to major or something like that, but I don't know enough music maths to provide that side of the analysis. I just think the piece is a masterclass of how a scene and its music can be intertwined and work together. You can feel it, even when you can't understand it yet. And I think that's beautiful.
scene attached for reference
had to share this on here cus what if I exploded
I saw a lot of posts mentioning behind the scenes stuff for "Project Hail Mary" but not a single one mentioning the OST!
Granted I came here like a month too late so maybe it was already talked about and I just haven't reached there yet buuuut!
Daniel Pemberton the man of talent you are!
The soundtrack, oh the fucking soundtrack! Absolute fucking perfection!
"A Moment", " Life is Reason", "Erratic Maneuver Detected"?! Sooo fucking good
And don't even get me started on the absolute fucking MASTERPIECE that is "Time Go Fishing"!!! I usually don't notice music in movies while watching cuz it blends so well but when this played in the cinema? I literally almost closed my eyes to immerse in it better but then Grace was in danger so I couldn't really do that xdd
Like I'm literally listening to it rn on loop and I have been for the last couple of days (when I can actually listen to music cuz I'm on a trip with someone, but will fix it at home)
Damn I knew Pemberton was talented, he made the soundtracks for the Spider-verse movies but still, this one just blew me away
Just... Listen to the OST, you definitely won't regret it

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i figured out what tune i kept hearing in the PHM soundtrack.
it's the fucking
DIES IRAE AND DIES ILLA.
daniel pemberton WHEN I FUCKING CATCH YOU (i love this so much holy fuck)
(explanation of the dies irae under line break because holy fuck i love music. also i give u an example of the Dies Irae in the PHM score in there as well!)
So I've been listening to the Project Hail Mary soundtrack a lot lately, because it's fantastic and incredible and Daniel Pemberton is some sort of composing wizard that I think has maybe put crack into his scores given how addictive they are.
But there's one track that has been driving me up the walls because I knew it reminded me of something, I just couldn't quite put my finger on what. It was giving me that trippy feeling where you're expecting another song to start playing, and getting disoriented when it doesn't.
Well, yesterday, I finally figured it out.
It was because this part at the end of "Wake Up Buddy":
(around 1:00-1:15 on the official track)
was reminding me of this:
(0:00-0:07 on the official track)
Naturally, I had to try and blend them together so you can hear what my brain thought was going to happen.
Was this intentional? I have no idea. I certainly wouldn't put it past Pemberton, although it does seem to be a bit of a reach.
There's just something about that little musical cue, especially leading into the "party" scene, that's getting me.
Because "Jupiter, the Bringer of Jollity" is a bright, excited piece of music, exuberant and lofty and everything a triumph should sound like.
Because in the scene before this, Grace has found the Taumoeba. He has found their solution. He has found the savior of both their species. He's bred it to survive the correct atmospheric conditions. Their mission has been successful. The beginning of the track "Tau Amoeba," preceding "Wake Up Buddy," is so, so gloriously triumphant, but it's juxtaposed with Grace immediately turning to his companion's body and sobbing because the one person who was supposed to be doing this with him is not there, and may never be there again.
This should have been a moment of victory. But without Rocky, there is no joyfulness, no celebration. The saving of two entire worlds means nothing if Rocky is not there to do it with him.
And then, Rocky wakes up.
And finally, everything has been worth it, because with Rocky returns light and warmth and companionship and amazement, and their success has meaning, and they can celebrate together. Grace's friend has returned, and thus so has his joy.
Jupiter, the Bringer of Jollity, indeed.
Project Hail Mary score enjoyers, have you all seen this interview with the composer, Daniel Pemberton? Highlights of it (for me) include:
hearing the original sample of the squeaky tap (did NOT disappoint, never in my life have I heard a noise like that)
he talks about why he thought this story needed this intense creative soundscape
the choral lines are intended to represent Earth cheering Grace on!!
he talks about doubling instruments in order to make it hard to tell what you're hearing
but also the importance of organic sounds and how many of them were made with body percussion (by kids! because Grace is a teacher!)
he also thinks of the two-part theme in The Message and Learning to Communicate as a call and response and he wrote it that way to emphasize the importance of Grace and Rocky's connection!
also I love the way he talks about an orchestra- that it's one huge, complex, expensive instrument, that it brings expectations to the listener that he didn't think were appropriate for this story (I agree)
he talks about how most movie music is in a minor key, and how hard it is to write something hopeful without it becoming treacly (and as a listener I notice some of the amazing major chords in this score the most, so good job walking that tightrope)
every note in the score was synchronized to the action on screen and I can completely hear it, I can hear the Mary running away from the Blip-A, the canister turning in space, the focus and terror and hope of Time Go Fishing, the moment Grace realizes he's in space
Other things I appreciate about the score that didn't come up in the interview:
The burial music for Ilyukhina and Yรกo is somber but not a dirge. It honors their deaths but also their intentions- to make their deaths meaningful
When the research facility blows up (and kills DuBois and Shapiro), the ambient sounds around Grace and Stratt go away and the score has only high notes on strings (probably doubled with something else), like your/their ears are ringing
I think the Centrifuge scene/music marks a turning point in the film: it's Grace starting to find his emotional and cognitive footing. He's not panicking anymore, he knows where he is (Tau Ceti) and why (astrophage) and he's just recovered a memory of himself in a moment of competence (even if his fun fact about centrifuge butter goes over like a lead balloon). I hear his confidence and curiosity growing in the music.
In Time Go Fishing, I hear the focus of urgent work, when you're locked in, completely present, following the plan and checking your actions as you go. But ALSO I love that you can hear the strain on the Mary, the creaking, the banging, and the sounds of the alarms.
I love love love that the call and response theme from The Message and Learning to Communicate shows up again in Wake Up Buddy! You hear the "call" section over and over, unanswered, and then finally near the end of the track it's answered overwhelmingly with a gorgeous huge chord. It's the sound of "Only us", the music of "Grace Rocky save stars". ๐
What amazing work, what an amazing piece of art.