Considering it's the long-running animated property in history -- and that familiar score has surfaced in half of the incarnations of the show (as well as a few of Hanna-Barbera's various clones) -- it's odd that there's never been a good "Scooby-Doo" album.
The long out-of-print "Snack Tracks" CD omitted two of the Danny Jannsen songs ("Pretty Mary Sunlite" and "I Can Make You Happy") in favor of the covers by Jerry Reed and Davy Jones from "The New Scooby-Doo Movies" (which were inferior, IMO), plus they only included the season 1 version of the theme song. There was literally room for 40 more minutes of music on that CD, so it irks me that they didn't include both versions of each song. A few instrumental variations of the theme song have made their way onto bloated Hanna-Barbera CD compilations, but never the complete score for the show.
Also conspicuously absent from CD are the songs from "A Pup Named Scooby-Doo," which seemed tailor-made for an album.
There's an enormous multigenerational Scooby-Doo fanbase that spans back 50 years, so it's about time that somebody got off their butts and gave Scooby-Doo's music the lavish attention that it deserves. I do appreciate Rhino's attempt with "Snack Tracks," but that was a frustrating release due to its many omissions and the annoyingly unnecessary dialogue snippets at the end of practically every track.
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