HBO’s DTF St. Louis is a sharp, darkly comedic limited series written and directed by Steven Conrad, starring Jason Bateman, David Harbour, and Linda Cardellini. Set in a suburban Missouri town, the show weaves a murder mystery through the lens of mid-life longing and romantic chaos.
From the very first episode, music plays a defining role in shaping its tone — walking a careful line between melancholy and dark wit. The score and needle drops are just as carefully crafted as the scripts themselves, making the DTF St. Louis soundtrack a standout element of one of HBO’s most talked-about series of 2026.
DTF St. Louis Soundtrack Overview
| Detail | Info |
|---|---|
| Series Title | DTF St. Louis |
| Creator / Director | Steven Conrad |
| Network / Platform | HBO / HBO Max |
| Series Premiere Date | March 1, 2026 |
| Series Finale Date | April 12, 2026 |
| Total Episodes | 7 |
| Original Composer | Alex Wurman |
| Soundtrack Label | WaterTower Music |
| Soundtrack Release Date | April 12, 2026 |
| Total Score Tracks | 23 |
WaterTower Music released the official DTF St. Louis soundtrack album on April 12, 2026 — the same day as the series finale. The album contains 23 original score tracks composed by Alex Wurman and is available for streaming and download across all major digital music platforms, including Spotify, Apple Music, and Amazon Music.
The score is a layered, emotionally grounded work that blends orchestral arrangements with subtle electronic textures. Tonally, it reflects the show’s central contradiction — suburban normalcy disrupted by explosive emotional and criminal chaos. Rather than leaning into conventional thriller music tropes, Wurman’s score finds beauty and unease in quiet moments, using understated melodic motifs to track the inner lives of its characters.
The series also makes heavy use of licensed songs — classic pop, soul, and rock — as recurring needle drops that function almost like a second language within the show. The 5th Dimension’s 1969 track Let the Sunshine In operates as the unofficial theme, recurring across multiple episodes.
Who Composed the DTF St. Louis Soundtrack?
The DTF St. Louis original score was composed by Alex Wurman, an Emmy Award-winning composer and longtime collaborator of series creator Steven Conrad. The two have worked together across multiple projects, including Conrad’s cult Amazon series Patriot and the animated series Ultra City Smiths.

Alex Wurman was born on October 5, 1966, in Chicago, Illinois, into a deeply musical family. His father, Hans Wurman, was a classically trained composer and arranger who pioneered early electronic music — famously recording works on one of the first Moog synthesizers ever produced. Raised in that environment, Alex attended the Academy of Performing Arts High School in Chicago before studying composition at the University of Miami and the American Conservatory of Music.
He moved to Los Angeles to pursue a career in film and television scoring, initially working within composer Hans Zimmer’s extended team — contributing orchestrations and additional music to projects including The Lion King and Armageddon. Wurman then struck out independently and built one of the most eclectic filmographies in Hollywood.
He is best known for his score to the Oscar-winning documentary March of the Penguins (2005), praised for its majestic orchestral-electronic blend, and for his work in comedy with Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004) and Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby (2006) alongside director Adam McKay. His work for the HBO telefilm Temple Grandin (2010) earned him the Emmy Award for Outstanding Music Composition for a Miniseries, Movie or a Special. He also received an Emmy nomination in 2008 for Bernard and Doris.
His DTF St. Louis score marks his most significant release in over seven years, according to the film music community.
Alex Wurman — Selected Composer Filmography
| Year | Project | Type |
|---|---|---|
| 2001 | Thirteen Conversations About One Thing | Film |
| 2002 | Confessions of a Dangerous Mind | Film |
| 2004 | Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy | Film |
| 2005 | March of the Penguins | Documentary |
| 2006 | Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby | Film |
| 2007 | Four Christmases | Film |
| 2010 | Temple Grandin (Emmy Winner) | TV Film |
| 2011 | Something Borrowed | Film |
| 2011 | The Switch | Film |
| 2011 | The Last Lions | Documentary |
| 2012–2013 | The Newsroom (Season 1) | TV Series |
| 2017–2018 | Patriot | TV Series |
| 2019 | Perpetual Grace, LTD | TV Series |
| 2021 | Ultra City Smiths | Animated Series |
| 2026 | DTF St. Louis | TV Series |
DTF St. Louis Official Score Tracklist
The following is the complete original score tracklist as released by WaterTower Music on April 12, 2026, and verified via Film Music Reporter.
- Let’s Explore — 1:55
- Are You Down? — 3:07
- Life Champions — 2:12
- The Fifth Key — 3:13
- The Arrest — 2:18
- Start Right Up — 2:49
- I Want Your Dreams — 2:55
- The Go-Getter — 2:37
- On Your Left — 1:00
- For Serious — 4:18
- Life Insurance — 2:31
- Good Dad Figure — 2:37
- Umpire — 2:59
- We’re Okay — 1:22
- I Loved Him — 4:04
- Old Friends — 3:12
- Dead Weight — 3:05
- Chicago — 1:19
- Amphezyne — 5:09
- Beware — 1:37
- Tiger Tiger — 5:55
- Ghost Bike — 3:25
- Swings — 2:59
Score Highlights
“Tiger Tiger” is the longest and most expansive track on the album at 5:55, suggesting it accompanies one of the series’ most emotionally or dramatically intense moments. It sits late in the album sequence, aligning with the show’s climactic episodes.
“Amphezyne” at 5:09 is another standout — notably, the fifth episode of the series shares this title, indicating the track likely serves as either the episode’s central musical piece or its closing motif. Its extended runtime suggests a sweeping, emotionally sustained composition.
“For Serious” at 4:18 is the longest track in the album’s first half. Given its placement in the middle of the tracklist and its duration, it appears to be one of the score’s primary dramatic themes — possibly tied to the murder investigation’s turning point.
“I Loved Him” at 4:04 carries one of the most emotionally transparent titles on the album, hinting at a grief or revelation moment within the narrative. It lands just past the album’s midpoint, paired alongside equally heavy entries like “Dead Weight” (3:05) and “Old Friends” (3:12).
“Let’s Explore” (1:55) opens the album with a lighter touch, reflecting the show’s suburban-comedy surface before the darker layers begin to emerge.
“Swings” closes the album at 2:59 — a title that, much like the show’s emotional arc, suggests something both innocent and suspended in uncertainty.
DTF St. Louis Licensed Songs / Needle Drops
DTF St. Louis uses a carefully curated selection of licensed songs across all seven episodes. The tracks span classic soul, folk, rock, and contemporary pop, and many carry thematic connections to sunshine, rain, and emotional extremes — a recurring motif throughout the series. All song placements below are sourced and verified via NME and FandomWire.
Episode 1 — Cornhole
| Song | Artist | Timestamp |
|---|---|---|
| Let the Sunshine In | The 5th Dimension | 05:23 |
| Hello Sunshine | Aretha Franklin | 23:28 |
| Breathing Air | Sharp Pins | 33:00 |
| Sunshine of Your Love | Ozzy Osbourne | 46:37 |
Episode 2 — Snag It
| Song | Artist | Timestamp |
|---|---|---|
| Lip Gloss | Lil Mama | 06:39 |
| Time’s Up | Cherrelle | 10:34 |
| I Wish It Would Rain | The Temptations | 20:59 |
| Nails, Hair, Hips, Heels | Todrick Hall | 34:02 |
| The Sun Ain’t Gonna Shine | The Walker Brothers | 53:01 |
Episode 3 — The Go Getter
| Song | Artist | Timestamp |
|---|---|---|
| Let the Sunshine In | The 5th Dimension | 07:30 |
| Catch the Wind | Donovan | 26:44 |
| Ain’t No Sun Since You’ve Been Gone | Gladys Knight & The Pips | 34:11 |
| Lightning’s Girl | Nancy Sinatra | 46:24 |
Episode 4 — Missouri Mutual Life & Health Insurance Company
| Song | Artist | Timestamp |
|---|---|---|
| Let the Sunshine In | The 5th Dimension | 11:00 |
| Don’t Make Me Over | Jim O’Rourke | 13:44 |
| White Room | Cream | 35:46 |
| Rainy Day in June | The Kinks | 42:31 |
Episode 5 — Amphezyne
| Song | Artist | Timestamp |
|---|---|---|
| Forever Young | Bob Dylan | 00:05 |
| Sunshine Help Me | Spooky Tooth | 17:28 |
| Rainbows | Dennis Wilson | 28:04 |
| Too Much Rain | Carole King | 34:33 |
Episode 6 — The Denny’s Plan
| Song | Artist | Timestamp |
|---|---|---|
| The Sun Is Burning | Simon & Garfunkel | 10:36 |
| Down to Zero | Joan Armatrading | 21:41 |
| The Last Waltz Suite | The Band | 32:10 |
| This Will Be Our Year | The Zombies | 37:20 |
Episode 7 — No One’s Normal. It Just Looks That Way from Across the Street
| Song | Artist | Timestamp |
|---|---|---|
| Here Comes the Sun | The Beatles | 01:31 |
| You Are My Sunshine | Elizabeth Mitchell | 18:53 |
| I’m Gonna Love You Just A Little More Baby | Barry White | 35:36 |
| The Flesh Failures (Let the Sunshine In) | James Rado, Lynn Kellogg & Melba Moore | 50:10 |
Where to Stream the DTF St. Louis Soundtrack?
The official DTF St. Louis original score album, released by WaterTower Music, is available now on all major streaming platforms. You can listen to Alex Wurman’s complete score on Spotify, Apple Music, and Amazon Music, with the album also available for digital download. The series itself streams exclusively on HBO Max in the US and on Sky and NOW TV in the UK.
FAQs
Who composed the DTF St. Louis original score?
The original score for DTF St. Louis was composed by Alex Wurman, an Emmy Award-winning composer known for March of the Penguins, Anchorman, Temple Grandin, and Patriot. Wurman has a longstanding creative relationship with series creator Steven Conrad.
How many tracks are on the DTF St. Louis score album?
The official soundtrack album contains 23 original score tracks, with a total runtime spanning from short cues like On Your Left (1:00) to extended pieces like Tiger Tiger (5:55).
When was the DTF St. Louis soundtrack album released?
The soundtrack was released on April 12, 2026, by WaterTower Music — coinciding with the broadcast of the series finale on HBO.
What is the theme song of DTF St. Louis?
The recurring musical anchor of the series is Let the Sunshine In by The 5th Dimension (1969), which appears across multiple episodes and reflects the show’s sun-and-rain lyrical motif.
Where can I stream the DTF St. Louis soundtrack?
The original score is available on Spotify, Apple Music, and Amazon Music. The series itself streams on HBO Max.
What licensed songs are featured in DTF St. Louis?
The show features a wide range of licensed needle drops, including tracks from Aretha Franklin, The Temptations, Ozzy Osbourne, Bob Dylan, The Beatles, Simon & Garfunkel, Carole King, The Kinks, Cream, Gladys Knight & The Pips, Barry White, and more.
How many episodes does DTF St. Louis have?
DTF St. Louis is a limited series with 7 episodes, which premiered on March 1, 2026, and concluded on April 12, 2026, on HBO.