Labrinth not involved in Euphoria's third season

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The third season of TV drama Euphoria will not feature music by pop star Labrinth, according to US reports, after he previously said he was "done" with the industry.

The London singer and producer wrote the dramatic, moody score and several songs for the first two series of the popular US teen drama.

Last year, broadcaster HBO announced that he would once again be part of the returning show, this time joined by fellow composer Hans Zimmer.

But in March, Labrinth distanced himself from the forthcoming chapter in a strongly worded Instagram post which criticised network HBO, which broadcasts Euphoria, and record label Columbia, which releases the soundtrack.

Labrinth criticised the show in an expletive-heavy statement, which concluded: "I'm out. Thank you and good night."

It was not clear what had led to Labrinth's post, but US outlets Rolling Stone and Hollywood Reporter have now confirmed he will not be involved in the third season, which is released this weekend.

BBC News has asked representatives for Labrinth for a comment, and approached Columbia and HBO for a response.

Labrinth is currently still scheduled to perform at the Coachella music festival in California this weekend.

He wrote several songs for the first two seasons of Euphoria, including Formula, Still Don't Know My Name and the Grammy-nominated Never Felt So Alone, featuring Billie Eilish.

'The sound of Euphoria'

Asked to explain what had happened with Labrinth and the show, Euphoria creator Sam Levinson told Rolling Stone: "I don't know."

"He [Labrinth] is an incredible collaborator and someone who really built the foundation of the sound of Euphoria."

On adding Oscar-winner Zimmer into the mix, Levinson said: "On Euphoria, each character's storyline is like its own film in a way."

He added: "In general, I was less interested in needle drops and more interested in something that guided us through this world.

"They're out of high school, so the pop roots of it have faded away. At the same time, because of how I imagined it visually, I wanted to lean into an old-fashioned Hollywood Western score."

Zimmer, who has has produced scores for movies including Dune, The Lion King, Interstellar and True Romance, previously stated that Labrinth had "shaped the show's identity", and that he was "looking forward to contributing to the ongoing story and helping shape this new season through music".

Euphoria creator Sam Levinson and actress Sydney Sweeney attended the LA premiere for the new series earlier this weekReuters

Euphoria has been the launchpad for the careers of some of Hollywood's hottest stars - Zendaya, Sydney Sweeney and Jacob Elordi.

And earlier this week they reunited on the red carpet for the Los Angeles premiere of the show's third and possibly final season.

The show will return to HBO on Sunday, four years after the last instalment, and finds its main characters having evolved from being troubled teens to equally troubled twenty-somethings.

Several critics have suggested that latest series fails to reach the dizzy heights of its glory years, though.

The Telegraph's Eleanor Halls awarded two stars, declaring: "Euphoria has descended into one man's creepy, sex-obsessed fantasy."

In another two-star review, BBC Culture's Caryn James said: "The show has lost its zeitgeisty edge."

The third instalment, according to Variety's Alison Herman, "feels like entertaining but disjointed fan fiction".

The Hollywood Reporter's Daniel Fienberg noted how "Zendaya still dazzles", but asked "has Sam Levinson's HBO drama aged out of relevance?"

The Independent's reviewer, Nick Hilton, though, gave the "generation-defining show" four stars, saying it "paints a clear-eyed, unflattering portrait of modern America".