
Based on her observations of the lives of the students around her, the piece highlighted the tender bond between the feuding Cassie and Maddy, and the loss of the connection between Lexi and Rue. Lexi’s hard work on her play Our Life came to fruition this week and looked like it had the power to heal some of the rifts that had been growing in East Highland. Philipe Sarde’s “Les Choses De La Vie (Final)” scored one scene where the narrative tumbled from reality and back into Lexi’s play, while other tracks by Ennio Morricone and John Williams also featured. The eighth episode’s soundtrack focused less on pulling from the pop and hip-hop oeuvres it’s associated with, taking a more cinematic approach. The season ended with her quoting her sponsor Ali, saying: “The thought of maybe being a good person is what keeps me trying to be a good person.”

Rue began to mend her friendship with Lexi and kept on her path of sobriety, maturely walking away from Jules with the realization that she had put her ex-girlfriend through enough. Ashtray’s desire to protect his adopted older brother took things into blood-soaked territory, though, as he fatally stabbed Custer and refused to let Fez take the fall with the cops. At Fezco’s house, meanwhile, the dealer’s plans for a wholesome night at the theater were scuppered by the arrival of Custer and his desire to try and pin Mouse’s death on Fez. The drama kept growing as Maddy followed her onto the stage and then chased her through the school corridors over her betrayal, with the pair seemingly beginning to make up by the end of their battle. Lexi’s play Our Life devolved into chaos as her sister Cassie took offense to the portrayals of her and her boyfriend Nate, storming on stage to confront her younger sibling mid-production. The season two finale brought pain to some of the residents of East Highland but gave others the closure they needed. After a massive season one soundtrack, the music for season two is kicking things up yet another gear – packing in an incredible amount of syncs that keep the episodes moving at a compelling pace, and reflecting the importance of music in our everyday lives.
#EUPHORIA THEMED PARTY TV#
Soundtracks are always integral to TV shows, teasing out the drama and emotion in scenes in new ways, yet Euphoria’s soundtrack almost feels like a character in the episodes itself always there in the background to change our perspective on a plot point or make them hit that bit harder.

Listen to the best of the Euphoria soundtrack. Just as integral to its success as its narrative arcs, though, was the Euphoria soundtrack, which featured everyone from Billie Eilish & Rosalía, Drake, and DMX, to J.I.D., J Balvin, and a special collaboration from Labrinth and the show’s leading light, Zendaya.

The first season of HBO’s Euphoria was one of the most talked-about shows on TV in 2019, thanks to its extreme storylines of teen hedonism and the darkness of addiction and mental health issues.
