Liminal dread, dialled into the sound. The Backrooms OST doesn’t score fear so much as texture it with hums, pipe-clangs, and fluorescent buzz to make architecture feel like it’s breathing. I haven’t seen the film yet, but this is not your typical jump-scare scoring. Instead, it’s slow-leak dread, the kind that seeps into drywall with synthesizer oscillation, found recordings, and industrial timing.
The early tracks lean more ambient — synths drifting like flicker-light, low drones that never resolve, just hover. Most horror scores rush toward the scare. This one makes you sit with the carpet-smell and yellow light first.
Then the percussion creeps in — distant, mechanical, almost industrial — like something behind the walls keeping its own rhythm. It never fully announces itself as “the monster’s theme.”
What’s most impressive is how the record holds up divorced from the footage. Strip the visuals entirely, and it still functions as a genuinely strong ambient/liminal-space album — something you could put on and just sit inside, the way you’d sit inside a Tim Hecker or William Basinski record. That’s rare for a horror OST.
Kane Parsons is a good composer — genuinely, and working with Edo Van Breeman, he’s working in negative space, letting absence and hum do the heavy lifting instead of orchestral bombast, and that restraint is the harder skill.





















