Every song in the Fallout TV series

The Fallout games are known for their rich library of songs from the 1930s, 40s and 50s, and the show follows suit. Here are all of the songs you'll hear on your journey through the wastelands.

Ella Purnell (Lucy) in Fallout. Credit: JoJo Whilden/Prime Video © 2024 Amazon Content Services LLC
Ella Purnell (Lucy) in Fallout. Credit: JoJo Whilden/Prime Video © 2024 Amazon Content Services LLC

The Fallout video game series has always been known for its unique retro-futuristic aesthetic. The games are all set in a post-apocalyptic landscape that seems to be stuck culturally in the 1940s, with music, movies and iconography all harkening back to that era.

The Fallout TV series on Amazon Prime Video continues this tradition, with tons of music from the 1950s, 40s, 30s and before. Here are the songs you hear in each episode:

Episode 1 — "The End"

  • "Orange Color Sky" — Nat King Cole (also appears in Fallout 76 and Fallout 4. It was also used in promotional material for Fallout 76)
  • "Don't Let the Stars Get in your Eyes" — Perry Como
  • "Who Do You Suppose" — Connie Conway
  • "Some Enchanted Evening" — The Castells
  • "Start it Slow" — Mari Jones with Johnny Moore's Band
  • "Keep That Coffee Hot" — Scatman Crothers
  • "A Nervous Kiss" — Carl Coccomo
  • "So Doggone Nervous" — Johnny Cash
  • "All Over Again" — Johnny Cash
  • "Brighter Side" — Connie Conway
  • "Mariachi De Amigos" — Donald Quan and Rick Lazar
  • "Crawl Out Through the Fallout" — Sheldon Allman (also appears in Fallout 4)

Episode 2 — "The Target"

  • "Into Each Life Some Rain Must Fall" — The Ink Spots w/ Ella Fitzgerald (also appears in Fallout 3 and 4)
  • "Don't Fence Me In" — Bing Crosby & The Andrews Sisters (also appears in Fallout 76)
  • "It's a Man" — Betty Hutton (also appears in Fallout 4)
  • "I Don't Want to Set the World on Fire" — The Ink Spots (also appears in Fallout 3, 4, and 76)

Episode 3 — "The Head"

  • "Maybe" — The Ink Spots (also appears in Fallout, Fallout 3, 4, and 76)
  • "So Doggone Lonesome" — Johnny Cash
  • "We'll Meet Again" — The Ink Spots
  • "Tweedle Dee" — LaVerne Baker
  • "In the Mood" — Glenn Miller
  • "Act Naturally" — Buck Owens and the Buckaroos

Episode 4 — "The Ghouls"

  • "Let's Go Sunning" — Jack Shaindlin (also appears in Fallout 3)
  • "Just Fine" — Michael Brown
  • "What to Do" — Buddy Holly
  • "It Ain't the Meat (It's the Motion)" — The Swallows
  • "Journey into Melody" — Sam Fonteyn
  • "I Can Dream, Can't I?" — The Andrews Sisters

Episode 5 — "The Past"

  • "Henry" — The Jet Jones
  • "Robin in the Pine" — Bonnie Guitar
  • "The Battle Hymn of the Republic" — William Steffe (also appears in Fallout 3 and 4)
  • "National Pride" — Cedric King Palmer
  • "Ladyfingers" — Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass
  • "What a Difference a Day Makes" — Dinah Washington
  • "It's Just A Matter of Time" — Brook Benton

Episode 6 — "The Trap"

  • "Texas and Beyond" — Patrick John O'Hara Scott
  • "Improvisation on Tchalkovsky" — Django Reinhardt
  • "Dardanella" — Alvino Rey And His Orchestra
  • "Theme From a Summer Place" — Percy Faith
  • "Lonely Hours" — Gene Armstrong and His Texas Nite Hawks
  • "Summer in Love" — I Marc 4 feat. Edda Dell'Orso
  • "Give Me The Simple Life" — June Christy
  • "Fallout 4 Main Theme" — Inon Zur (also appears in Fallout 4, duh)
  • "Skitter Skatter" — Metrotones
  • "I'm Tickled Pink" — Jack Shaindlin (also appears in Fallout 3)

Episode 7 — "The Radio"

  • "Fallout 4 Main Theme" — Inon Zur (also appears in Fallout 4)
  • "I'm Tickled Pink" — Jack Shaindlin (also appears in Fallout 3)
  • "Sixteen Tons" — Merle Travis (also appears in Fallout 76)
  • "Only You" — The Platters
  • "Bossa Angela" — Roland Kovac
  • "Minutemen Radio" — Heather MacArthur
  • "What a Difference a Day Makes" — Dinah Washington
  • "Così fan tute" — Mozart
  • "Yeah Yeah Baby" — Cool Papa Jarvis
  • "You're Everything" — The Danleers
  • "From the First Hello to the Last Goodbye" — Jane Morgan
  • "Oktoberfest" — Douglas A. Wood

Episode 8 — "The Beginning"

  • "Oktoberfest" — Douglas A. Wood
  • "I Don't Want to See Tomorrow" — Nat King Cole
  • "We Three (My Echo, My Shadow, and Me)" — The Ink Spots (also appears in Fallout 76)

To stay up to date on everything fantasy, science fiction, and WiC, follow our all-encompassing Facebook page and Twitter account, sign up for our exclusive newsletter and check out our YouTube channel.