Songs from Frozen. List of Frozen’s main theme song and insert songs.
Disney’s Frozen, released in 2013.
The story featuring the sisters Anna and Elsa became a worldwide sensation, leading to the sequel Frozen II as well as several spin-off works.
In this article, we’ll introduce all the theme songs and insert songs from the Frozen series.
If there’s a song you heard in the film that stuck with you, try finding it here.
Let this article be your cue to enjoy Frozen from a musical perspective next time.
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Songs from Frozen. List of main and inserted songs from Frozen (41–50)
Return To ArendelleChristophe Beck

This is the song where Kristoff, who had left thinking of Anna, returns to her side to try to help her.
The way it starts with intensity and then quiets down mirrors the film itself, making us as viewers feel emotionally drawn in.
The melody that makes you wonder, “What’s going to happen next?” is wonderful.
Return to ArendelleChristophe Beck

This piece conveys a sense of hurrying back to Arendelle, and its sudden shift to a lonely mood in the latter half is captivating.
There are no lead vocals, but a human chorus is used almost like an instrument, which creates a distinct kind of tension unlike the other tracks.
It's a wolf!Christophe Beck

This is an insert song that plays in an unexpectedly dire situation where a wolf appears.
It effectively conveys the tense atmosphere of fleeing from the wolf, the fear it inspires, and the strong resolve to never abandon each other and never lose.
Enclosed summitChristophe Beck

It’s a piece that feels like a Disney battle scene, using sounds like the piccolo to convey a tense, suspenseful mood.
With finely articulated notes from instruments like the violin and viola, the sense of excitement and heartbeat comes through whether you’re watching or listening.
ice fieldChristophe Beck

Even without watching the visuals, the sense of urgency comes through vividly just from the music—it’s a serious piece.
When I think of orchestral music, I often imagine something glamorous and gentle, but this piece uses the orchestra to express seriousness and human madness, and it’s incredibly cool.
VuelieChristophe Beck & Frode Fjellheim Feat. Cantus

It features vocals reminiscent of overseas folk songs, making it an essential piece for shaping the work’s world into a picture book–like, mystical atmosphere.
Rather than using many instruments, it’s simply many people singing without instruments, which further enhances its charm as if it were a foreign folk song.
Reindeer are much better.Shinichiro Hara

It’s a wonderful song in which Kristoff reaffirms his friendship with Sven the reindeer.
The simplicity of having just a ukulele-like instrument and Kristoff (Shinichiro Hara) makes it all the more effective at expressing Kristoff’s humble and pure nature.





