The second half of Bridgerton Season 4 arrives with its usual swirl of scandal and slow-burn romance, but it’s the music that once again quietly commands the ballroom. Part 2 leans into the Netflix show’s now-signature formula: contemporary pop refracted through sweeping string arrangements, layered beneath pivotal confessions and high-society spectacle.

Under the supervision of longtime composer Kris Bowers, the latest episodes expand the series’ orchestral universe, pairing chart-topping hits with original score to underscore shifting alliances and long-awaited revelations. As alliances fracture and passions crest, each needle drop feels less like background and more like narrative architecture.

Bridgerton Season 4: What songs are featured in part 2?

Before Bridgerton Season 4 Part 2 arrives with new musical twists, the first four episodes already established a lush, classical-meets-pop identity that threaded through Benedict and Sophie’s Cinderella-pacing storyline.

Yerin Ha in episode “Yes or No” of Bridgerton, Season 4 (Source: IMDb)

In Part 1’s opening sequence, orchestral reimaginings of Coldplay’s “Life in Technicolor” and Usher feat. Pitbull’s “DJ Got Us Fallin’ in Love” set the masquerade ball ablaze, while Third Eye Blind’s “Never Let You Go” adds a wistful undertone to early palace scenes.

Now, taken together, the soundtrack of Part 2 expands the season’s musical palette, blending contemporary hits with period drama sensibilities in ways that echo and enrich each twist in Benedict and Sophie’s story arc…

  • 360 by Charli XCX | Episode 5
  • Birds of a Feather by Billie Eilish | Episode 5
  • Lose Control by Teddy Swims | Episode 5
  • Just What I Needed by The Cars | Episode 6
  • Fields of Gold by Sting | Episode 6
  • Never Be the Same by Camila Cabello | Episode 8
  • The Night We Met by Lord Huron | Episode 8