I still get chills thinking about the first time I heard the main titles roll for 'The Midnight Club'—it was late, I had headphones on, and that thin, uneasy piano line crawled right into my bones. The music for the Netflix series was composed by The Newton Brothers, who’ve become practically synonymous with Mike Flanagan’s brand of intimate horror. Their scores have that quiet-but-creepy quality: lots of close-up piano, bowed strings that whisper more than they shout, and occasional electronic textures that feel like a memory of something mechanical creaking in the dark.
I’m the sort of person who pauses shows for the credits, so I dug into their other work afterward. If you like the vibe in 'The Midnight Club', you’ll recognize similar signatures in 'The Haunting of Hill House', 'The Haunting of Bly Manor', and 'Midnight Mass'—they find ways to make simple motifs feel personal, like a character’s private soundtrack. The soundtrack itself has moments that stick with you long after the episode ends; I often replay a track while doing late-night reading or sketching because it keeps the mood spooky but introspective. If you want to listen, it’s usually available on streaming platforms or as part of the show’s soundtrack releases—definitely worth a dedicated, headphones-on listen.
I usually shout this to people mid-conversation: The Newton Brothers did the music for 'The Midnight Club'. I love how their score sneaks up on you—soft piano, lonely strings, and little electronic pulses that make ordinary rooms feel haunted. They’ve worked on a bunch of Mike Flanagan projects, so if a tune sounds familiar it might be from 'The Haunting of Hill House' or 'Midnight Mass'.
I found myself replaying a couple of cues late at night while sketching character ideas; it’s exactly the kind of score that inspires atmosphere without being showy. If you want the creepy, low-key vibe, search for The Newton Brothers’ soundtrack from the series on your streaming service and give it a focused listen—some pieces are tiny masterpieces of mood.
I’ve had a couple of friends ask the same thing recently, usually while we’re rewatching scenes and debating what makes them so unnervingly effective. For the TV series 'The Midnight Club', the composers credited are The Newton Brothers. They’re longtime collaborators with the showrunner and specialize in that restrained, emotional horror palette—piano-led passages, subtle string work, and atmospheric sound design that blurs the line between music and ambience.
If you’re curious about their approach, listen for leitmotifs tied to characters or specific flashback moments: they don’t always hit you over the head with melody, but when those themes reappear they add a layer of melancholy under the scares. On a practical note, if someone meant the title in another context—like an older racing game franchise called 'Midnight Club'—that’s a different beast; those games typically used licensed tracks and various contributors rather than a single scoring duo. For the Netflix series though, The Newton Brothers are the safe, accurate credit, and checking the end credits or the soundtrack listing will confirm it fast.
2025-09-04 09:19:36
17
View All Answers
Scan code to download App
Related Books
Club Red: Sin And Seduction
Tarina
0
13.5K
Welcome to Club Red—where sin is a promise, and surrender is inevitable.
This isn’t just a club. It’s a playground for the rich, the ruthless, and the wicked. Behind its blood-red doors, power is intoxicating, desire is currency, and no one leaves unscathed. The men who rule the night here don’t ask—they take. They don’t fall—they claim. And they sure as hell don’t chase… until her.
Each book in the Club Red series is a fast-paced, filthy, and a downright sinful ride into obsession, temptation, and the kind of passion that makes a man risk everything. From dangerous billionaires to possessive bosses and men who live in the shadows, these stories burn hot, hit hard, and leave you aching for more.
At Club Red, no fantasy is too dark. No secret is safe. And once you step inside, there’s no going back.
So tell me…are you ready to play?
Dark Tales Of Midnight: A Collection Of Taboo Stories
Author Siren writes
10
5.0K
[Warning: This is a dark taboo novel containing erotica stories that leaves you dripping wet and bitting your nails with immense pleasure.]
*******
You didn't stumble onto this book by an accident. You came looking for something darker, the kind of craving that wakes up after midnight, when innocence feels like a lie and desire feels like a truth. You pretend to be innocent but I know what you crave behind closed doors, the fantasies that make you dripping wet and your lips become rosy pink.
Dark Tales of Midnight isn't about fairytales or soft love confession, this book contains all your deepest darkest desires, the sexual experience you always wanted.
Every page inside this book leaves you wanting more, so if you keep reading don't pretend you didn't know. You wanted this and here, wanting is only the beginning.
Dedicated to all the good girls who love being anything but innocent after the dark.
After catching her boyfriend in bed with two women, struggling horror writer Winona Hart thinks the universe has officially hit rock bottom. Then a mysterious invitation changes everything.
The Midnight Project promises fame, money, and the opportunity of a lifetime: an exclusive fully-paid reality experience for selected rising creators. Writers, actors, gamers, influencers—only a handful are invited to the luxurious Midnight Hotel hidden deep within the mountains.
At first, it feels like the perfect distraction from her ruined relationship.
Until the first contestant dies.
Then comes the terrifying truth: nobody can leave the hotel, every floor hides a deadly game, and when midnight strikes, time resets all over again.
Trapped inside endless lethal loops with a group of dangerously attractive strangers, Winona must survive horrifying creatures, twisted rules, and betrayals that grow darker with every reset. But the deeper she falls into the hotel’s secrets, the more she realizes one thing...
The Midnight Hotel did not choose its guests randomly.
And the calm, mysterious man who keeps saving her may know exactly why she was invited.
By day, Maeve Briggs is just a regular, quiet high school senior. She tries to blend in, takes care of her younger brother, and deals with her mom cleaning the huge, fancy Dovewood mansion—a mansion owned by the very rich and very dangerous Caden Dovewood.
But at night, Maeve becomes someone totally different: Eve. She puts on a black wig and high heels, dancing for strangers in a secret club. No one there knows who she really is. It's her secret way to escape her tough life and earn money to pay the bills.
Then, Caden Dovewood walks into the club. He sees her, recognizes her, but Maeve remains unaware he's witnessed her secret life.
It's only later, likely at his mansion, that Caden reveals his knowledge. He's loaded with money, he's dangerous, and he's the last person Maeve ever wanted to know her secret. Now that he does, he won't let it go. He's always a step ahead, pulling her closer with words that make her heart race and eyes that seem to see right through her. He doesn't just want to know her secrets; he wants her. And he doesn't feel one bit guilty about going after her, making their whole situation a dangerous and twisted game.
Kara Dawson is afraid of the dark. Nightmares came every night, haunting her of a past she cannot let go and a dreadful thing she cannot comprehend. A peaceful sleep is nothing but an elusive dream especially when her over-reacting senses are screaming of something intangible lurking in the shadows of the night. Will she survive each midnight before her fears fully devour her or will she learn to love the dark?
He is there. He sees her and her every breath. He knows her fears and he isn't suppose to meddle and stir someone else's fate. But he can't continue watching her drown deeper as the midnight kisses the moon. Now, he must save her, not until the day breaks...
Midnight Desires is a collection of forbidden romances filled with dangerous attraction, impossible choices, and secrets that could ruin lives. Every story explores the thin line between temptation and true love, proving that the heart doesn’t always follow society’s rules.
I still get a little buzz saying the name out loud: 'The Midnight Club'. For me the show is most definitely the brainchild of Mike Flanagan — he’s the creator who adapted Christopher Pike’s spooky YA novel into the Netflix series. I loved reading Pike as a kid, so seeing Flanagan take that hospital-for-terminal-teens premise and fold it into his signature slow-burn, character-driven horror felt like a perfect match. He leaned into the emotional beats as much as the scares, which is classic Flanagan; if you’ve seen 'The Haunting of Hill House' or 'Midnight Mass', you’ll hear the same reverence for grief and memory.
Besides Flanagan’s name up front, the show was shaped by a tight creative team — writers, directors, and producers who’ve worked with him before — and it’s clearly an adaptation rather than a straight retelling of Pike’s book. That mix of source material plus Flanagan’s gothic sensibility is why the series feels both nostalgic and fresh to me. If you like horror that cares about characters first, then the creator credit being Mike Flanagan is your green light to give 'The Midnight Club' a shot.
I binged this thing over a too-late weekend and kept shouting names at my roommate — so here’s the cast scoop the way I’d tell a friend at 2 a.m. The Netflix show 'The Midnight Club' is basically an ensemble piece centered on a group of terminally ill teens in a hospice who tell stories and chase mysteries. The young core cast includes Iman Benson (who plays Ilonka), Ruth Codd (Anya), and Igby Rigney (Spencer). Those three really carry a lot of the emotional weight, and they’re surrounded by other lively teen performances that keep the group dynamic feeling real.
On the adult side, the series features a handful of familiar faces from Mike Flanagan’s troupe — notably Kate Siegel among others — who take on important supporting roles linked to the hospice staff and the teens’ backstories. If you liked the vibe, it helps to think of it as an ensemble drama rather than a single lead vehicle: the heart of the show is the kids’ friendships and the storytelling circle they form. If you want the full, exhaustive cast list, I usually check IMDb or the show’s official page so you can match each actor to every character (handy if you want to follow an actor after the credits roll).
I can't get over how atmospheric the filming locations for 'The Midnight Club' are — the show was shot mostly in and around Vancouver, British Columbia, and that Pacific Northwest mood leaks into every frame. A lot of the hospice exteriors and some of the creepier institutional hallways were filmed at the old Riverview Hospital site in Coquitlam, which has that perfect mix of historic brick and overgrown grounds. If you've ever wandered through photos of Riverview, you'll recognize the look: peeling paint, long corridors, the kind of place that dresses up as a fictional hospice without needing much help.
Beyond Riverview, the production leaned on Vancouver-area soundstages and nearby towns for interiors and controlled sequences. Many scenes that feel intimate and claustrophobic were actually built on stage in the Lower Mainland, while exterior shots and establishing footage came from various spots around Vancouver and surrounding municipalities. The result is this uncanny combination of real, slightly decayed institutional architecture and the hyper-controlled atmosphere of studio sets — it makes the show feel both grounded and otherworldly. As someone who loves location-hunting, I found it fun to follow fans' maps online and spot where the outside shots line up with the on-set interiors; just remember that some areas are private property and the real-life places can be quieter than they seem on screen.