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Awesome Music / DuckTales (2017)

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And then he opens his beak...

DuckTales, woo-tune!


  • "The Last Crash of the Sunchaser!" features the culmination of the mystery around Della, and Dewey's desperate final race for the last piece of the puzzle while Scrooge tries to stop him fully gets the epic score it deserves. The music that closes that episode out is gorgeous and heartbreaking.
  • The final scene of Season 1 features a brief snippet of the much-beloved score from the Moon level in the NES game.
    • Expanded in Season 2 as it's revealed to be a lullaby Della wrote for the triplets, meaning that after 30 years the music suddenly has lyrics, which are a perfect ode to the franchise's spirit of adventure.
    • And in the Season 2 finale, an exciting orchestral rendition plays during the battle in space.
  • In "The Town Where Everyone Was Nice!", the Three Caballeros sing a glorious rendition of their classic theme song. While fighting a giant man-eating flower, no less!
  • The Christmas theme song for season 2's Christmas episode is catchy, especially with the singer doing a very good impression of Frank Sinatra.
  • The song that plays in "Double-O Duck in You Only Crash Twice!". The lyrics mirror Launchpad's struggles during the episode, it perfectly apes the melancholy theme songs that the James Bond films are known for, and it gives Ben Schwartz a chance to show off his singing chops.
  • The absolutely epic instrumental version of the Chip 'n Dale: Rescue Rangers theme that plays when the Rangers first launch the Ranger Plane and when they defeat Steelbeak at the climax.
  • The show's composer Dominic Lewis proves he's also one hell of a singer in "Louie's Eleven!" as he plays Donald's voice as Daisy hears it, with a ballad about his need to be heard.
  • The credit songs for "The Rumble for Ragnarok!" has an 80's inspired track called "There Goes My Hero".
  • "The Lost Cargo of Kit Cloudkicker!" features an instrumental version of the TaleSpin theme song, first played during the Higher for Hire commercial, then during the climactic dogfight.
  • After the double whammy in "The Last Adventure!" that he is the Headless Manhorse of the Apocalypse and voiced by Keith David, Manny initiates a transformation into his true form. At that very moment, Carl Johnson's theme music from Gargoyles starts playing and the fans of that show finally realize what is happening right before their eyes. Awesome doesn't even begin to describe it.

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