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11 Composers Pick the Best TV Scores of 2026

It is, somehow, the middle of the year already, and we’ve already had a lot of really great television in 2026. With that comes great music — but you don’t have to take the IndieWire Craft team’s word for it. We reached out to a number of our favorite composers to ask them about what has caught their ears in terms of the best TV scores so far this year. We got back a wave of appreciation for inventive, wild, and unforgettable scores that have helped make some of the best moments of TV this year.

Also some the best TV moments of last year, too — we got a few honorable mentions from late 2025, including for Jeff Russo’s work on “Alien: Earth” (“Hacks” composer Carlos Rafael Rivera can’t get the cue “Siblings” out of his head) and Dave Portman’s score for “Pluribus,” which Russo told IndieWire he loved as a fantastic example of how you can use strings to “punctuate the odd and unnerving.”

We’ve also included a couple of honorable mentions from 2025 where the composers we reached out to really dug into what made those scores memorable, including the challenge of Chris Bacon’s “Wednesday” score elevating a massive reveal right at the end, and a classic thriller sound where the melody modulates our feeling of safety in Sean Callery and Sara Baron’s score for “The Beast in Me.”

But IndieWire reader, if you love “Widow’s Bay,” well, you and Finneas O’Connell have something in common. David Fleming’s score for the extremely cursed (affectionate) Apple TV series won praise from many composers we reached out to, even if it wasn’t their pick for best of the year so far. They pointed out that “Widow’s Bay” can ride the line — or “bounce,” as “The Pitt” songwriter Gavin Brivik put it — between horror and comedy, and be great at both, which is no mean feat. “The sense of harmony feels abstract in a way that bypasses the usual musical pathways of your brain and really immerses you in the storytelling,” Dan Romer, composer for “A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms,” told IndieWire.

“‘The Stone Room’ was an immediate standout for me,” O’Connell told IndieWire. “It walks the tightrope between horror and comedy SO well. Tension and a playfulness that doesn’t take away from the many scares. Don’t think it would be the same show at all with any other score.”

But there was also praise for Romer’s work on “A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms” — Dan Deacon, composer for “Task,” told IndieWire that it “ruled,” which is appropriate — and a lot of love for O’Connell’s synth-heavy score for “Beef.” Daniel Pemberton has had a hell of a year scoring everything from “Project Hail Mary” to “The Drama” to “Masters of the Universe,” as well as the music for “Slow Horses” (along with TOYDRUM); he told IndieWire, “The ending cue for ‘Beef’ by Finneas had such a fantastic piercing sound and emotional punch. [It’s] so hard to get something that elegant and impactful.”

Read on to learn more about the TV shows with standout scores in 2026 (so far).

Shows are listed in alphabetical order.

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