Elle (marketed in some materials as Elle: From the World of Legally Blonde) is Prime Video’s coming-of-age prequel series built around a teenage version of Elle Woods, the character Reese Witherspoon originated in 2001’s Legally Blonde. Created by Laura Kittrell and executive produced by Witherspoon alongside Caroline Dries, Lauren Neustadter, Marc Platt, Amanda Brown, and Jason Moore, the eight-episode first season premiered on Prime Video on July 1, 2026.
Newcomer Lexi Minetree stars as sixteen-year-old Elle, uprooted from sunny Bel-Air to grunge-era Seattle in 1995, with June Diane Raphael and Tom Everett Scott as her parents, and Gabrielle Policano, Jacob Moskovitz, Chandler Kinney, and Zac Looker rounding out her new high school orbit. The season also marks the final screen performance of James Van Der Beek, who plays school superintendent and mayoral candidate Dean Wilson.
From here on, this guide is entirely about the music.
Music is arguably the loudest storytelling device in Elle. The show leans into its 1995 Seattle setting with a wall-to-wall alternative and grunge soundtrack that does most of the work of contrasting Elle’s Bel-Air brightness with her new hometown’s flannel-and-feedback mood, backed by an original underscore from composer Tom Howe. Below is everything that could be verified about who made the music, what’s actually confirmed about a release, and the full song-by-song breakdown.
Elle Soundtrack Details
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Series | Elle (Elle: From the World of Legally Blonde) |
| Creator | Laura Kittrell |
| Directors | Jason Moore, Sammi Cohen, Pete Chatmon, Stacie Passon |
| Studio | Hello Sunshine and Amazon MGM Studios |
| Platform | Prime Video |
| Season 1 Premiere | July 1, 2026 |
| Episodes | 8 |
| Composer | Tom Howe |
| Music Supervisor | Brienne Rose |
| Score Album | Not released / not yet announced |
| Official Song Playlist | Apple Music’s “Elle: Official Playlist” — 38 songs (Prime Video-curated) |
| Scene-Tagged Song Count | 44 (per WhatSong’s season archive) |
| Genre | Coming-of-age comedy-drama |
Elle Soundtrack Overview
There is currently no standalone Elle score album or compiled soundtrack release from a record label. That’s a real gap, not an oversight in reporting — a search of the Film Music Database and Film Music Reporter’s own release announcements turned up no entry for the show, which is consistent with how Amazon has handled some of its other song-driven series this year (2026’s Off Campus, for comparison, got a proper Island Records mixtape on its premiere day; Elle has not received the same treatment as of this writing).
What does exist is an official, Prime Video–curated playlist on Apple Music titled “Elle: Official Playlist,” which the platform notes was recently updated and currently holds 38 songs pulled from Season 1. That playlist functions as the closest thing to an “official” song list, even though it isn’t a commercial soundtrack release in the traditional sense — no label, no catalog number, no liner notes.
Where the show is unambiguous is in its musical identity: this is a 1995-set series that uses period-accurate alternative rock, riot grrrl, and grunge tracks to do a lot of its tonal heavy lifting, needle-dropping artists from Radiohead and Soundgarden to Bikini Kill and The Cranberries against Elle’s more polished pop sensibility (the season opens on Mariah Carey’s “Fantasy” and closes an early episode on Radiohead’s “Creep” — a contrast the show returns to by its finale). Underneath all of that sits Tom Howe’s original score, which has not been isolated for release, so its specific contributions are harder to catalog than the soundtrack’s very well-documented needle drops.
Who Composed the Elle Soundtrack?
Tom Howe composed the original score for Elle. This is confirmed directly by Film Music Reporter, which named him as the composer in a June 5, 2026 scoring-assignment article, and independently corroborated by both WhatSong’s series database and Howe’s own official Spotify artist page, which lists Elle among his upcoming Amazon projects.
Born December 26, 1977, in London, Howe is a British composer, conductor, and multi-instrumentalist who grew up in a musical household and trained classically on piano, clarinet, and guitar before studying at the University of Edinburgh. He worked as a session musician across classical and contemporary settings before moving into television composing in 2008, with an early credit on the BBC’s How the Celts Saved Britain.
A close mentorship with composers Harry and Rupert Gregson-Williams opened the door to larger studio work, including additional music for Wonder Woman and a solo composing credit on Professor Marston and the Wonder Women, which earned him a Jerry Goldsmith Award nomination.
Howe’s biggest calling card remains Ted Lasso, Apple TV+’s Emmy-winning comedy, for which he co-wrote the main title theme with Marcus Mumford — a collaboration that earned an Emmy nomination for Outstanding Original Main Title Theme Music in 2021, followed by a second Emmy nomination in 2023 for the song “Fought & Lost,” co-written with Jamie Hartman and Sam Ryder.
He carried that relationship with showrunner Bill Lawrence into Shrinking, where his main title theme with Benjamin Gibbard won a Hollywood Music in Media Award. Elsewhere, his filmography spans Aardman’s animated features Early Man and A Shaun the Sheep Movie: Farmageddon (the latter earning him an HMMA nomination), Prime Video’s Daisy Jones & the Six, and 2025’s Dog Man, which brought him an HMMA nomination in the animated feature category. He became a member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in June 2020.
Notably, Elle isn’t Howe’s only 2026 Amazon assignment — Film Music Reporter’s coverage places him concurrently on the Prime Video series Every Year After and the MGM+ series American Classic, alongside the theatrical release Reminders of Him and the Netflix documentary Michael Jackson: The Verdict, making him one of the busiest television composers working this year.
Worth noting for franchise context: the two prior Legally Blonde feature films were both scored by Rolfe Kent, so Howe’s underscore represents a clean handoff to a new composer rather than a continuation of an existing musical identity — reinforced by Elle leaning on a curated 90s song catalog rather than Kent’s original themes.
Elle Official Tracklist
There is no numbered, official tracklist to report here in the traditional soundtrack-album sense — no score release with named cues and durations has been announced for Tom Howe’s music as of this writing. If that changes, this article will be updated to reflect it.
What can be verified with confidence is the full roster of licensed songs used across Season 1, which is unusually well documented for a show without a formal soundtrack release. Prime Video’s own “Elle: Official Playlist” on Apple Music lists 38 songs, while WhatSong’s episode-by-episode scene archive — which tags songs against specific on-screen moments — catalogs 44 entries once repeat placements (like the title theme, which recurs in every episode) are counted individually. The full breakdown, cross-checked against both sources plus Deadline and TheWrap’s episode-by-episode soundtrack coverage, is below in the Licensed Songs section.
Score Highlights
Because Tom Howe’s underscore hasn’t been isolated into a released album or a published cue sheet, there’s no verified list of named score tracks to highlight — no trade source has published cue titles, and none should be invented here. What can be said, grounded in Howe’s documented compositional style across projects like Ted Lasso, Shrinking, and Daisy Jones & the Six, is that his work typically blends orchestral writing with pop, rock, and electronic production techniques rather than leaning on purely traditional scoring.
On a show this heavily driven by licensed 90s needle drops, that kind of score would most plausibly function as connective tissue — handling quieter character beats and scene transitions in between the wall-to-wall soundtrack cues rather than competing with them for the spotlight. That is a reasonable inference based on Howe’s known approach, not a confirmed description of specific Elle cues, and it should be read as such.
Elle Licensed Songs & Needle Drops
Elle is built around a dense, verified catalog of period-accurate songs. The list below is organized by episode and cross-referenced between WhatSong’s scene-tagged archive and TheWrap’s published episode-by-episode soundtrack breakdown. The instrumental “Only Happy When It Rains” by Garbage functions as the show’s title theme and recurs at the start of nearly every episode; it’s listed once here rather than repeated eight times.
Episode 1 — “Pilot”
- “Fantasy” — Mariah Carey (opens the episode, scoring Elle’s Sweet Sixteen party)
- “Walking on Broken Glass” — Annie Lennox
- “Have You Ever Really Loved a Woman?” — Bryan Adams
- “Just a Memory (Vocal Mix)” — Endangered Species
- “Roam” — The B-52’s
- “Shove” — L7
- “New Sensation” — INXS
- “Creep” — Radiohead (closes the episode)
Note on distinguishing placements: “Just a Girl” by No Doubt appears in Prime Video’s promotional trailer for the series, but that trailer placement is separate from the song’s actual in-episode use, which comes later in Episode 3 as a live karaoke performance (detailed below). The two placements shouldn’t be conflated.
Episode 2 — “No Silly, I Go Here”
- “Shiny Happy People” — R.E.M.
- “I Am a Poseur” — X-Ray Spex
- “Don’t Touch My Bikini” — The Halo Benders
- “Spin the Bottle” — The Juliana Hatfield Three
Episode 3 — “You’re Not the Girl I Thought You Were”
- “Pretty in Pink” — The Psychedelic Furs
- “Bitch Theme” — Bratmobile
- “Black Hole Sun” — Soundgarden
- “Nancy Sin” — Beat Happening
- “Stay (I Missed You)” — Lisa Loeb
- “Just a Girl” — No Doubt, performed on-screen as a karaoke duet by Lexi Minetree (Elle) and Zac Looker (Dustin)
- “Wonderwall” — Oasis, performed on-screen by Tom Everett Scott (Wyatt Woods)
- “What’s Up?” — 4 Non Blondes
Episode 4 — “I’m Not Afraid of a Challenge”
- “Jack in the Bounce” — Selectracks
- “Planet Love” — The Dylans
- “Don’t Stop Me Now” — Queen
- “Seether” — Veruca Salt
- “Super Crush” — Tiger Trap
- “Cornflake Girl” — Tori Amos
- “Bells Ring” — Mazzy Star
Episode 5 — “Trust Me, I Can Handle Anything”
- “Eternal Flame” — The Bangles (used twice in the episode)
- “Typical Girls” — The Slits
- “Let Me Be Your Bible” — Susan Voelz
- “Macarena (Bayside Boys Remix)” — Los Del Rio
- “Like a Fool” — Superchunk
Episode 6 — “Whoever Said Orange Is the New Pink Was Seriously Disturbed”
- “Rebel Girl” — Bikini Kill
- “Go” — credited to Legs per WhatSong’s scene archive; TheWrap and Deadline’s published tracklists instead credit this cue to Pearl Jam. This is a genuine discrepancy between named sources that could not be resolved with full confidence, and it’s flagged rather than silently picked one way or the other. See the Source Transparency Report below.
- “Don’t You (Forget About Me)” — Simple Minds (used twice in the episode)
Episode 7 — “You Picked the Wrong Girl”
- “Blister in the Sun” — Violent Femmes (WhatSong’s credit, and the song’s known recording artist; TheWrap’s published list attributes it to “Violent Flames,” which appears to be a typographical error rather than a distinct credit)
- “Dreams” — The Cranberries
- “Whoomp! (There It Is)” — Tag Team
Episode 8 — “What, Like It’s Hard”
- “Creep” — Radiohead (reprised from the pilot)
- “Two Princes” — Spin Doctors
- “Beautiful Life” — Ace of Base
- “This Heaven Has Bars” — Pot Valiant
- “Don’t Let the Soap Run Out” — The Meices
- “Love Buzz” — originally Shocking Blue (1969), popularized by Nirvana’s 1988 cover, performed on-screen at the Winter Formal by Gabrielle Policano (Liz)
- “High School” — an original song written for the series, performed on-screen by Gabrielle Policano (Liz). This credit comes from TheWrap’s episode breakdown; it had not yet appeared in WhatSong’s scene-tagged archive at the time of this writing, so it’s flagged here as confirmed by one named source rather than cross-verified by two.
Tom Howe Filmography
| Year | Title | Type | Howe’s Role |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2017 | Wonder Woman | Film | Additional music |
| 2017 | Professor Marston and the Wonder Women | Film | Composer |
| 2018 | Early Man | Film | Composer (with Harry Gregson-Williams) |
| 2019 | A Shaun the Sheep Movie: Farmageddon | Film | Composer |
| 2020–2023 | Ted Lasso | TV Series (Apple TV+) | Composer; theme co-written with Marcus Mumford |
| 2022 | The People We Hate at the Wedding | Film | Composer |
| 2023 | Daisy Jones & the Six | TV Series (Prime Video) | Composer |
| 2023 | Book Club: The Next Chapter | Film | Composer |
| 2023–present | Shrinking | TV Series (Apple TV+) | Composer; theme co-written with Benjamin Gibbard |
| 2024 | Knuckles | TV Series (Paramount+) | Composer |
| 2025 | Dog Man | Film | Composer |
| 2025 | Merv | Film (Prime Video) | Composer |
| 2026 | American Classic | TV Series (MGM+) | Composer |
| 2026 | Every Year After | TV Series (Prime Video) | Composer |
| 2026 | Reminders of Him | Film | Composer |
| 2026 | Elle | TV Series (Prime Video) | Composer |
Where to Listen to the Elle Soundtrack?
There’s no single official soundtrack album to stream, but nearly every song from Season 1 can be heard through Prime Video’s own “Elle: Official Playlist” on Apple Music. Individual tracks are also available on Spotify and Amazon Music through each original artist’s own catalog and label, since these are licensed period songs rather than newly recorded soundtrack cuts. Tom Howe’s original score has not been released on any platform and isn’t currently streamable on its own.
FAQs
Who composed the score for Elle?
British composer Tom Howe, known for Ted Lasso and Shrinking, wrote the original underscore for Elle, per Film Music Reporter.
Is there an official Elle Season 1 soundtrack album?
No. As of this writing, no record label has released a compiled soundtrack or score album for the series. The closest official release is Prime Video’s curated playlist on Apple Music.
How many songs are featured in Elle Season 1?
Prime Video’s official Apple Music playlist lists 38 songs. WhatSong’s more granular scene-by-scene archive tags 44 individual music placements across the season, a difference that comes from how each source counts repeat uses of the same track.
What is the Elle theme song?
“Only Happy When It Rains” by Garbage plays as the title theme at the start of nearly every episode.
What song does Elle perform at the pool party karaoke scene?
Elle (Lexi Minetree) sings “Just a Girl” by No Doubt as a karaoke duet with Dustin (Zac Looker) in Episode 3, distinct from the song’s separate use in the show’s promotional trailer.
When did Elle Season 1 premiere on Prime Video?
All eight episodes premiered together on Prime Video on July 1, 2026.
Where can I stream the Elle soundtrack?
Individual songs are streamable through Prime Video’s “Elle: Official Playlist” on Apple Music, as well as through each artist’s own catalog on Spotify and Amazon Music.