It sounds like they took a bunch of ants, dipped them in ink and sat them on a blank staff.
I
love this analogy. The next time I go on a rant about the state of music and theme songs, I must use this.
I don't think music makes or breaks a show, but in many cases it compliments it very well. For example the original
Feud theme fit the Hatfield/McCoys motif very well in the 70s and 80s. Using it for the Harvey version doesn't work as well IMO...every season I hold my breath to hear the revamp from Dawson's '94 season. And every year I'm a bit bummed that they won't use it. Oh well, better than the techno music from Louie and Richard Karn's versions. Those nuances are largely missing nowadays and have become generic, random noise...honestly, I think it reflects what music in general has become. About 10 years ago, when a lot of themes were becoming techno, someone brought up how theme songs reflect what's "in" on the radio. In the 70s it was disco, in the 2000s, it was techno, now it's the cookie-cutter pop.
Unfortunately, theme songs in general have become an afterthought in the last 20 years. Sitcoms have done it for about that long, opting to run the names over the opening scene, but now dramas have started doing it. A trend that I prolly hate more than squeezed credits. Sorry, I get that commercials take away a lot of content, but 7 seconds of "ants on a blank staff" does not a theme song make. Not all of us have short attention spans and need to reach for the remote every break we get.
Anyway, unlike other themes, it's rare that a game show theme becomes iconic or even identifiable with the show.
Jeopardy is arguably the most famous example, with TPiR a close second. But other than that, I don't think there's too many themes you could play for someone and they immediately connect it with the show.