Ghostbusters: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack is the soundtrack to the 2016 film Ghostbusters, a reboot of the eponymous 1984 film and the third installment of the Ghostbusters franchise. The soundtrack was released by RCA Records on July 15, 2016, alongside the film and featured 14 songsâÂÂfour of them preceded the soundtrack as singles. Ghostbusters: Original Motion Picture Score is the film score composed by Theodore Shapiro, released through Sony Classical Records on July 8.
The soundtrack to the film consisted of original songs performed by Zayn Malik, Elle King, 5 Seconds of Summer, Mark Ronson, Passion Pit, A$AP Ferg, among others. It featured three other versions of "Ghostbusters"âÂÂalong with the original version by Ray Parker Jr., and two cover versions of it being performed by Walk the Moon, Pentatonix, Fall Out Boy and Missy Elliott. RCA Records distributed the soundtrack in digital and physical formats on July 15, 2016, alongside the film.
King performed the pop rock song "Good Girls" which was released as a digital single on June 3, 2016; an accompanying music video of the song was released on July 13, two days ahead of the film's release. The song is featured in the end credits of the film. The second song, "Saw It Coming", performed by G-Eazy featuring Jeremih was released on June 10. Fall Out Boy's version of "Ghostbusters" entitled "Ghostbusters (I'm Not Afraid)" released as the third single from the album on June 23. The fourth song "Girls Talk Boys" by 5 Seconds of Summer was released along with the film's soundtrack on July 15.
Unlike the predecessors, the album garnered a mixed reception. James Christopher Monger of AllMusic wrote "the album, much like the film, treads familiar ground [...] but the rest of the set feels rushed and forgettable". Fall Out Boy's cover of "Ghostbusters" was negatively received with criticism for its musical structure. Hilary Busis of Vanity Fair criticised the song as "disastrously overproduced" and felt that it "strips away the originalâÂÂs goofy charm, replacing it with pounding percussion and Patrick StumpâÂÂs signature nasal wail. ItâÂÂs like Alien Ant FarmâÂÂs 2001 cover of âÂÂSmooth Criminal,â but less nuanced." Randall Roberts of Los Angeles Times also wrote: "With lyrics seemingly written during a bathroom break, its singsong rhymes and cheesy '80s production haven't aged well." Ethan Jacobs of Inverse was much critical of Malik's "Who", albeit praising the vocals and music, he found its use as an original song in the film, which was being a romantic number, felt to be lame and cheesy.
In September 2015, Theodore Shapiro was announced to score music for the film, after previously working with Feig on Spy (2015). The album, which consisted of 21 tracks from Shapiro's score, was released by Sony Classical Records digitally on July 8, 2016, and in CDs on July 15.
Reviewing the score, Filmtracks.com wrote "This music is not the Ghostbusters we know and love. It's simply a really solid parody score by a competent composer who needs to branch out into more genres. If you can tune out the history of the franchise and appreciate Shapiro's Ghostbusters as a standalone entity, then you'll enjoy the work. If you love the history of the concept, though, you'll be left with a sour taste in your mouth that only Slimer would be proud of." Tony Black of Flickering Myth summarised "A fun, sometimes thrilling, occasionally creepy score which elevates the comedy stylistics on screen nicely, and while you may still always remember Ghostbusters for the theme tune, donâÂÂt write off this orchestral piece too quickly."