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Ian Hultquist
Ian Hultquist
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Key Information

Ian Hultquist is an American composer and musician. Hultquist is best known for his score for The Diabolical and for being a founding member of the band Passion Pit. He is also known for his works on film and television such as Mommy Dead and Dearest, The First Monday in May, My Blind Brother, Memoria and The Walking Dead: Dead City.

Career

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After graduating from Berklee College of Music, Hultquist became a founding member of the indie band Passion Pit in 2007 and acted as their music director while on tour. This pulled him away from film composing for a while and in 2010 he and his wife Sofia Hultquist created their side project 'Aislyn'.[1]

In 2013 he was introduced to documentary filmmaker Andrew Rossi who quickly hired him to score his film Ivory Tower. Around the same time, while on set for a Passion Pit music video, Hultquist would also meet and befriend actor David Dastmalchian, who would then hire Hultquist to score his feature film 'Animals'.

From there, Hultquist's composing career burgeoned as he began to compose music for films at SXSW and Sundance. In October 2014, he officially left Passion Pit.[2]

Personal life

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Hultquist is married to fellow composer and musician Sofia Hultquist.[3]

Works and awards

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Hultquist has composed dozens of soundtracks and film scores for both film and TV. He is best known for scoring The Diabolical and for being a founding member of the band Passion Pit. He is also known for his works on movies such as Mommy Dead and Dearest, The First Monday in May, My Blind Brother and Memoria.[4][unreliable source] He also composed score for Apple TV+'s Dickinson with Drum & Lace, as well for the AMC series The Walking Dead: Dead City.

Discography

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  • Silicon Cowboys (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) (2016)
  • The First Monday in May (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) (2016)
  • Love & Bananas: An Elephant Story (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) (2018)
  • The Gospel According to André (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) (2018)
  • Assassination Nation (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) (2019)
  • I Know What You Did Last Summer (Music From the Amazon Original Series) (2021)
  • Die in a Gunfight (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) (2021)
  • The Walking Dead: Dead City (Original Television Series Soundtrack) (2023)

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Ian Hultquist is an American , producer, and musician based in , , best known for his original scores for films, television series, and documentaries. A founding member of the indie rock band , Hultquist transitioned from band performance to film scoring after studying at , where he honed his skills in film scoring. He relocated to in 2014 with his wife, composer Sofia degli Alessandri-Hultquist (known as ), to focus on media composition, and he founded Little Twig Records in 2016 to release soundtracks. Hultquist's notable works include the scores for the Apple TV+ series Dickinson (2019–2022), the series Good Girls (2018–2021), and the AMC spin-off The Walking Dead: Dead City (2023–present), as well as documentaries like (2017) and (2016). He has collaborated frequently with directors such as , , and , contributing to over 40 films and 20 television projects. In recognition of his rising influence in documentary scoring, Hultquist was named to Doc NYC's list in 2020. More recently, Hultquist co-composed the score for the comedy-drama Grosse Pointe Garden Society (2025), continuing his partnership with Sofia degli Alessandri-Hultquist on projects like the later seasons of Good Girls and the second season of The Walking Dead: Dead City (2025). His compositional style often blends electronic elements with orchestral arrangements, drawing from his early experiences playing in bands and guitar in punk-pop groups during his youth in .

Early life and education

Childhood and early influences

Ian Hultquist was born on October 31, 1985, in , California. His family relocated to Highland Park, a suburb north of Chicago, , when he was about eight or nine years old, where he primarily grew up. Described as California-born and Chicago-raised, Hultquist's early years in the Midwest shaped his initial encounters with music amid a suburban environment far removed from the glamour of Hollywood film composing, which he later recalled as feeling "so foreign and faraway" to a young child in . Hultquist's introduction to music came at age ten during fifth grade, when he joined his school as an alto . With no musicians in his family—though his father occasionally played records by and —his passion was entirely self-driven, stemming from a personal attraction to the art form. He had no formal lessons or similar training, but by ages twelve or thirteen, he began exploring further by picking up the guitar and forming bands with friends to emulate pop and punk tunes from the radio. During his teenage years, he obsessed over the guitar in the style of many young enthusiasts while drawing inspiration from film scores like ' Jurassic Park theme, which he practiced on , as well as punk acts such as , Blink-182, and . These self-initiated pursuits, fueled by movies, radio hits, and a desire to create music collaboratively, laid the groundwork for Hultquist's enduring curiosity, which eventually led him toward formal studies in film scoring.

Studies at

Ian Hultquist enrolled at in , Massachusetts, in 2004, where he pursued a bachelor's degree in film scoring. This program equipped him with specialized training tailored to composing for visual media, building on his foundational skills from childhood playing in school bands. During his studies, Hultquist engaged in key coursework focused on film scoring techniques through courses such as Intensive Introduction to Film Scoring and Dramatic Scoring sequences, which emphasized creating music that enhances . He also explored in classes like Dramatic Orchestration for Film and Instrumentation and Score Preparation, learning to arrange for diverse ensembles including full orchestras. Additionally, media composition was covered in advanced modules like Post-Romantic Scoring, allowing him to adapt styles across genres for film, television, and other formats. Hultquist gained practical exposure to synthesizers and production tools integral to modern scoring, including , , and Cubase, via the Scoring Technology series of courses that integrated digital audio workstations and MIDI mockups. These technical skills complemented his creative development, preparing him for professional media composition. He graduated in 2008, having formed early musical networks within Boston's vibrant indie scene through collaborations and performances during his time on campus.

Career

Passion Pit involvement

Ian Hultquist co-founded the band in 2007 while studying at in , where he connected with frontman and other early members to expand Angelakos's initial solo project into a full ensemble. As a core performer, Hultquist contributed primarily on keyboards, guitar, and synthesizers, helping shape the band's signature electropop sound characterized by layered synths and energetic instrumentation. His involvement extended to the band's debut EP Chunk of Change (2008), where he provided synthesizers and backing vocals, as well as their breakthrough full-length albums Manners (2009) and Gossamer (2012), both of which featured his instrumental work and helped propel Passion Pit to critical acclaim and commercial success. From 2008 to 2014, Hultquist toured extensively with , performing at major festivals and venues worldwide, including stops across , Europe, and Asia, which solidified the band's live reputation for high-energy shows blending synthesizers and guitars. In October 2014, he announced his departure from the group on amicable terms to focus exclusively on film scoring, marking the end of his seven-year tenure with the band.

Transition to film scoring

After departing from in 2014, Hultquist relocated to with his wife, composer Sofia degli Alessandri-Hultquist (known as ), to pursue film scoring on a full-time basis. His experience in the band had equipped him with strong production skills that proved essential for transitioning into media composition. Leveraging connections from his film scoring studies at , Hultquist secured early opportunities scoring short films for emerging filmmakers and commercials, which built his portfolio and led to larger projects upon arriving in . His first notable feature-length collaboration came with the 2014 documentary , directed by Andrew Rossi, where he composed an original score featuring a minimalist drum-and-guitar pattern to underscore the film's exploration of higher education costs. During this period, Hultquist developed a signature hybrid style that fused electronic and indie elements from his band background with orchestral arrangements, often processing acoustic instruments through synths and samplers for a textured, modern sound. In 2016, he established Little Twig Records, an independent label dedicated to releasing soundtracks for films and television, enabling greater control over his output.

Film and television works

Film scores

Hultquist's film scores demonstrate a distinctive fusion of electronic production techniques and orchestral elements, often tailored to amplify emotional and thematic intensity in diverse genres. Drawing briefly from his background, these works incorporate synth-driven textures that enhance narrative pacing without overpowering or visuals. A pivotal early achievement was his score for the 2015 horror film The Diabolical, directed by Legrand, marking his breakthrough in the genre through the use of atmospheric synthesizers to evoke unease and mounting dread. In 2017, Hultquist composed for the documentary Mommy Dead and Dearest, directed by , employing minimalist electronic textures to underscore the psychological tension of its true-crime examination of maternal deception and murder. His score for the 2018 satirical thriller , directed by , featured high-energy, punk-infused tracks that propelled the film's chaotic depiction of digital vigilantism and . Among his other significant film contributions are the documentary (2016, dir. Jason Cohen), which chronicled the rise of computers with pulsating electronic motifs; the co-composed score with Sofia Hultquist for the fashion documentary (2016, dir. Andrew Rossi); Love & Bananas: An Elephant Story (2018, dir. Ashley Bell), blending organic sounds with synth layers to highlight themes; the Netflix vampire thriller (2021, co-composed with , dir. Adam Randall), utilizing distorted synths and hip-hop beats for urban horror; the romantic comedy (2022, dir. ); the coming-of-age drama Turtles All the Way Down (2024, dir. ), exploring through introspective electronic cues; the heartfelt drama All of You (2025, dir. William Bridges), featuring a hybrid score that mirrors the film's emotional multifacetedness; and the comedy Idiotka (2025, dir. Nastasya Popov), supporting the story of an aspiring fashion designer on a reality show with eclectic, modern cues. Hultquist has built enduring partnerships with directors such as Ashley Bell, with whom he collaborated on Love & Bananas, and on , fostering repeat engagements that have shaped his evolution toward genre-blending approaches in horror, , and dramatic features. This progression is apparent in his shift from genre-specific atmospheric builds to more versatile, narrative-integrated soundscapes that merge indie electronic influences with cinematic .

Television scores

Ian Hultquist has composed scores for several television series, often blending electronic and contemporary elements to enhance narrative tension and character development in serialized formats. His collaboration with Sofia Hultquist, known professionally as Drum & Lace, produced the score for the Apple TV+ series Dickinson (2019–2022), which reimagines the life of poet Emily Dickinson through a modern lens. The duo's electronic compositions mix period drama aesthetics with contemporary pop production, incorporating trap drums and influences from artists like Missy Elliott and Phoenix to reflect the young protagonist's emotional turmoil and defy historical expectations. Cues such as the "Death" theme were crafted to resemble fully produced songs, some gaining traction on platforms like Shazam for their bold, anachronistic energy. Hultquist co-composed the score for the crime comedy-drama Good Girls (2018–2021) with , using upbeat electronic and orchestral elements to underscore the suburban mothers' descent into crime and moral dilemmas across four seasons. For the Peacock mystery series (2022), Hultquist delivered a suspenseful score tailored to its youth-oriented thriller tone, emphasizing rhythmic pulses and bass-driven cues to sustain ongoing tension across episodes. The music avoids ambient lulls, instead maintaining a constant drive that mirrors the high-stakes teen drama and secrets unfolding in a serialized structure. Hultquist's work on The Walking Dead: Dead City (2023–present, AMC+), covering Seasons 1 and 2, evokes post-apocalyptic dread through layered electronics and ominous synths, drawing inspiration from John Carpenter's atmospheric style in films like Escape from New York. The score integrates organic field recordings from wilderness settings to heighten the urban decay of a zombie-infested Manhattan, creating warning motifs and character-specific themes that build unease without veering into melodrama. In 2024, Hultquist composed the score for the Max documentary miniseries Quiet on Set: The Dark Side of Kids TV, directed by Emma Schwartz and others, employing subtle electronic and orchestral layers to heighten the emotional weight of revelations about abuse and toxicity behind productions. Hultquist co-composed the score for the comedy-drama Grosse Pointe Garden Society (2025) with Sofia degli Alessandri-Hultquist, blending quirky electronic motifs with dramatic tension to accompany the story of a garden club entangled in a . In 2025, Hultquist scored the documentary series Unknown Number: The High School Catfish, directed by , which explores a case of and hidden identities among teenagers. The original music underscores the investigative with subtle, tension-building electronics suited to the real-life drama. Hultquist adapts his film scoring techniques to television by evolving core themes across multiple episodes, ensuring musical continuity while accommodating network constraints and episodic pacing, as seen in his pulse-driven motifs for suspense series and experimental soundscapes for genre-spanning shows.

Personal life

Marriage and collaborations

Ian Hultquist married composer and sound artist degli Alessandri-Hultquist, known professionally as , in the mid-2010s after meeting during the film scoring program at . Their shared backgrounds in performance and production have fostered a seamless professional synergy, with Hultquist's experience in band dynamics from complementing degli Alessandri-Hultquist's expertise in vocal performance and innovative techniques. The couple's collaborations blend their distinct styles, resulting in notable joint projects such as the score for the 2016 fashion documentary , where they incorporated eclectic electronic and orchestral elements to capture the high-energy world of the . They further co-composed the soundtrack for the Apple TV+ series Dickinson (2019–2022), infusing 19th-century poetry with modern pop production and experimental sounds to reflect the show's anachronistic tone. This partnership model allows them to divide creative responsibilities effectively, enhancing efficiency in their scoring process. Based in , Hultquist and his wife share a home studio that serves as a central hub for their collaborative work, facilitating integrated professional and personal lives. Their approach to collaboration has notably supported work-life balance, particularly following the birth of their , by adopting structured 9-to-5 workdays that prioritize time while drawing creative inspiration from parenthood.

Family and residence

Hultquist and his wife, Sofia degli Alessandri-Hultquist (known professionally as Drum & Lace), welcomed their first child, a daughter, in early 2021. This parenthood milestone has deeply inspired their creative process, unlocking new levels of imagination and prompting them to compose more efficiently while integrating family time into their workflow, such as holding their daughter during writing sessions. The family established their base in in 2014, a move that allowed Hultquist to immerse himself fully in film and television scoring opportunities within Hollywood's industry networks. In late 2022, they relocated to , , where they currently reside, continuing to support Hultquist's international projects while maintaining a structured routine to balance professional demands with family life. Hultquist manages the interplay between career and family by adopting a disciplined 9-to-5 workday when possible, taking on select projects to provide stability for his while avoiding excessive studio isolation, and incorporating remote during any for tours or shoots. Outside of professional commitments, he pursues personal experimentation with guitars and synthesizers, maintaining a collection that includes vintage models like the , which fuels his ongoing exploration of and production techniques.

Awards and nominations

ASCAP Composers' Choice Awards

Ian Hultquist received a nomination at the 2022 ASCAP Composers' Choice Awards for Top TV Composer, shared with his wife and frequent collaborator Sofia Hultquist (performing as ), for their work on seasons 2 and 3 of the Apple TV+ series Dickinson. The awards, voted on exclusively by the ASCAP composer community, honor outstanding achievements in screen music across , television, and video games, with nominees selected based on peer recognition of innovative and impactful scores. In the Top TV Composer category, Hultquist and Drum & Lace were joined by other prominent nominees, including Natalie Holt for Loki, Siddhartha Khosla for Only Murders in the Building, and Cristobal Tapia de Veer for The White Lotus. Voting for the 2022 awards opened to ASCAP members on February 22 and closed shortly thereafter, emphasizing the peer-driven nature of the process that highlights scores demonstrating creative excellence in television composition. Although Hultquist and did not win—the category went to for —the underscored peer acclaim for their distinctive, genre-blending approach to scoring Dickinson, which contributed to broader recognition of Hultquist's work. The results were announced on May 2, 2022, as part of the virtual ASCAP Screen Music Awards .

Other recognitions

Hultquist's score for the documentary , co-composed with his wife Sofia Hultquist, was included on the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences' shortlist of nine films for Best Original Score at the in 2017. It also earned a nomination for Best Documentary Score at the 12th in 2017. In 2018, Hultquist participated in the Sundance Film Festival's "Scoring for Sundance" panel, highlighting emerging composers and discussing their contributions to festival projects, including his work on Assassination Nation. In 2020, Hultquist was named to Doc NYC's 40 Under 40 list, recognizing emerging talent in the documentary field for his influential work in documentary scoring. Hultquist has received broader industry visibility through his frequent collaborations and transition from indie music with to scoring, earning praise in professional interviews for seamlessly integrating electronic and synth-driven elements from his band background into cinematic narratives. These recognitions, alongside ASCAP honors, underscore his rising profile without securing major awards such as an Oscar.

Discography

Passion Pit releases

Ian Hultquist served as a founding member of , contributing keyboards, synthesizers, and guitar to the band's early discography, helping shape their signature sound characterized by layered electronic textures and upbeat melodies. Although he received no solo production or writing credits on the band's releases, his instrumental performances were integral to the group's energetic electro-pop aesthetic. The band's initial releases were issued through Frenchkiss Records in the United States, with later albums appearing on . The debut EP, Chunk of Change (2008), marked Passion Pit's entry into the music scene, with Hultquist listed as a performer on synthesizers and providing vocal engineering on tracks 5 and 6. Key tracks like "Sleepyhead," the EP's standout single, prominently feature synth layers that exemplify his role in crafting the band's dreamy, danceable indietronica style. Released initially as a limited cassette before a wider digital and CD edition, the EP captured the raw, experimental energy of the group's formation at . On the full-length debut album Manners (2009), Hultquist was deeply involved as a core band member, performing on keyboards and guitar across the record while also recording vocals. His full album contributions helped produce the polished yet frenetic sound of tracks like "The Reeling," the that propelled to mainstream attention with its infectious synth hooks and falsetto-driven energy. Mixed at MixStar Studios and mastered for a vibrant pop sheen, Manners established Passion Pit's breakthrough formula of emotional depth beneath euphoric electronics. Hultquist continued his instrumental work on the sophomore album Gossamer (2012), delivering synth and guitar elements that added textural complexity to songs such as "," which debuted at No. 72 on the and highlighted the band's evolving maturity. Recorded primarily in , the album shifted toward more introspective themes while retaining the group's hallmark layered synthesizers, with Hultquist's performances supporting the transition to a fuller, more orchestral electro-pop palette. He departed the band in October 2014, prior to the release of their third album Kindred (2015), on which he is not credited.

Soundtrack albums

Ian Hultquist has released numerous soundtrack albums for films and television since 2015, often blending electronic, orchestral, and indie influences that echo his earlier work with as a stylistic precursor. These albums typically feature original scores composed solo or in collaboration, distributed through labels such as Little Twig Records, Lakeshore Records, and . His debut soundtrack album, Silicon Cowboys (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack), was released in 2016 on Little Twig Records, containing 19 tracks of documentary cues composed by Hultquist. That same year, he co-composed with Sofia Hultquist, a 22-track fashion documentary score also issued on Little Twig Records. In 2018, Hultquist's score for the film appeared on Lakeshore as an 18-track (expanded to 24 tracks in some editions), incorporating punk and electronic elements. For television, followed in 2022 on Lakeshore , featuring 14 tracks for the Peacock series. Hultquist contributed to the post-apocalyptic genre with The Walking Dead: Dead City (Original Television Series Soundtrack) for Season 1 in 2023 (20 tracks, Milan Records) and Season 2 in 2025 (26 tracks, Lakeshore Records). Among his other notable releases are Turtles All the Way Down (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) in 2024 (22 tracks on WaterTower Music) and the co-composed All of You (Apple Original Film Soundtrack) in 2025 with Sofia degli Alessandri (13 tracks, digitally released by Apple). In 2025, additional releases include Unknown Number: The High School Catfish (Original Series Soundtrack) (Lakeshore Records) and A Nice Indian Boy (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) (Milan Records). Overall, Hultquist has produced over 15 soundtrack albums since 2015, encompassing a range of genres from thriller to drama.

References

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