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An antidote to super-serious medi-dramas like E.R., the wacky comedy Scrubs tracks a group of, er, fresh-scrubbed residents who find themselves in all kinds of kooky, pulse-quickening situations. After the runaway success of its first season, Scrubs enters its sophomore year with a musical companion that's way more subdued than its parent show. Consisting of mid-tempo, rock-based songs with male vocalists, the album bypasses big names in favor of tasteful songs from both established and up-and-coming artists. For example, the show's theme song, "Superman" by Lazlo Bane -- which boasts a video directed by Scrubs star Zach Braff (J.D.) -- layers loping, drum machine-born beats with banjo picking, Weezer-esque synths, and meditative vocals. Other tunes, such as Eels' "Fresh Feeling" and Jeremy Kay's "Have It All," follow suit, combining organic instrumentation with programmed rhythm tracks. Mostly, however, the sound is simple, as on Shawn Mullins's sensitive "All in My Head," Francis Dunnery's spare, strings-tinged "Good Life," and two from former Men at Work frontman Colin Hay, who makes a cameo in an episode this season to sing "Overkill." Capped off with some quality alt-rock tunes -- the Shins' Elliott Smith-like "New Slang" and Guided by Voices' upbeat "Hold on Hope," among them -- Scrubs faces a positive diagnosis. Lydia Vanderloo, Barnes & Noble