Black Panther: Original Motion Picture Score contains Ludwig Göransson's score to Black Panther.
Track Listing[]
- Wakanda Origins
- Royal Talon Fighter
- Wakanda (feat. Baaba Maal)
- Warrior Falls
- The Jabari
- Waterfall Fight
- Ancestral Plane
- Killmonger
- Phambili
- Casino Brawl
- Busan Car Chase
- Questioning Klaue
- Outsider
- Is This Wakanda?
- Killmonger's Challenge
- Killmonger vs. T'Challa
- Loyal to the Throne
- Killmonger's Dream
- Burn It All
- Entering Jabariland
- Wake Up T'Challa
- The Great Mound Battle
- Glory to Bast
- The Jabari, Pt. II
- A Kings Sunset (feat. Baaba Maal)
- A New Day
- Spaceship Bugatti
- United Nations / End Titles
Not in the Official Soundtrack[]
- "In the Trunk" by Too $hort
- "The War Outside 2" (feat. Lavish D, THE HOMIE LON BEEZ & Thola) by Stizk Talk
- "Wololo" (feat. Mampintsha) by Babes Wodumo
- "Enfant béni" by DJ Arafat
- "Omunye" (feat. Benny Maverick & Dladla Mshunqisi) by Distruction Boyz
- "Tug of War" by Andy Mineo
- "Supermoon" by Orbis Tertius
- "Tonight" by BIGBANG
- "Bèrèbèrè" (feat. Ali Farka Touré) by Idrissa Soumaoro
- "Hangover" (feat. Snoop Dogg) by Psy
- "Getcha Getcha One Way" by DIE IV TY
- "Gobisiqolo" by Bhizer, Busiswa, S.C. Gorna & Trigger Bhepepe
- "Pray for Me" by The Weeknd & Kendrick Lamar
- "Nervous" by White Dave
- "What Is Love" by Andy Serkis (Haddaway cover)
- "Opps" (Film Mix) by Vince Staples & Yugen Blakrok
- "How Dare You" (feat. Mr. Selwyn) by Professor
- "The Rhythm" by Tumelo
- "Sleep Walkin" by Mozzy
- "All the Stars" by Kendrick Lamar & SZA
[]
- "Legend Has It" by Run The Jewels
- "BagBak" by Vince Staples
- "The Revolution Will Not Be Televised" by Gil Scott-Heron
Trivia[]
- Ludwig Göransson traveled to Senegal and South Africa to seek inspiration for his score. The most challenging aspect of the score was merging a traditional African sound with modern scoring techniques: "The most difficult part is that as soon as you put production and orchestra on top of African music, it doesn’t sound African anymore. So the challenge was incorporating these things and making them still feel African."[1]