The Seventh Dimension 02.22.08: Musing Over Music
Posted by T.G. Corke on 02.22.2008
After the small uproar that has materialised this week concerning WWE's recent use of entrance music, I share my thoughts on some of the current crop. And, in an ode to the Oscars this Sunday, I take a look at some of the very worst and very best that I can remember.
It looks like Ryan Byers was right. In his news report last week, he spoke of his concern that WWE may be planning to change some of its workers' entrance themes to reflect the release of their new CD, ‘WWE: The Music, Volume 8'.
And what did we get on Raw this week? Jeff Hardy and Mister Kennedy both coming out to new songs from the album.
I'll sum up my sentiments about these two now, as there's not much else to say about the songs on their own merits – Jeff's new music isn't awful, I wouldn't buy it but I feel it was necessary that he move away from the old music. The old music was synonymous with the Hardy Boyz, and it's important now that Jeff is fully recognised as his own entity rather than one half of an old tandem (especially since Matt has used that Monster Magnet song for well over five years now). Mister Kennedy's music isn't bad either, but it sucks compared to his old one and there was no reason to change it at all. I have a feeling we'll be seeing Kennedy back with his former ditty before long, while Jeff continues to use Endeverafter. I hope that's the case, anyway.
But this whole thing got me thinking – entrance music really does have quite a big effect on the wrestlers and how we perceive them. And so, for the last few days, I've well and truly been…
Musing Over Music
So this column is probably going to be a little disjointed, as it's neither one thing nor the other. It's basically a sequence of reflections that I've had, amidst going crazy with that unbelievably frustrating Ratchet & Clank game on PSP (the PS3 one is an immense improvement). Therefore, forgive me if this isn't as well-written – read: pretentious – or insightful as others I've produced. It's just a stream.
The first thing I thought when I heard Jeff's new music was that this is the exact right time to debut it. He's had some great results and is well and truly in the top tier of stars now, so it makes sense from a storyline perspective that WWE would pick up on this and shell out the money for a new track. They already gave him the stage-pyro at the beginning of this push, and now he's sustained the momentum it's only logical that they'd ‘reward' him for his efforts and dough-raking-in. If he'd had the new music and pyrotechnics when he first returned to WWE, or even mid last year while he and Matt were still occasionally teaming, it wouldn't have worked as well I don't think. I like the progression, here. It's not "change for the sake of change" (more on this very shortly), it's part of Jeff's career timeline. Having said that, and I can forgive it since Monday's Raw took place in Anaheim and Endeverafter are from Sacramento, having the band there in attendance seemed a bit desperate and may well do more to damage some peoples' opinion of WWE than it will promote the glam rock quartet. But we'll see how that turns out.
I remember how much it sucked balls when, in 2005, Batista won the World Heavyweight Championship for the first time using that generic dirge that could easily have been concocted by any eejit using Fruityloops within an hour or so. It was under-whelming as hell, although the match didn't help. But then, three months later at Vengeance, he came out to the similarly-sequenced ‘I Walk Alone' by Saliva, and had the awesomely clichéd fireworks that segued from the machine-gun pose, and I was grinning away long before he ever even entered the Cell. Of course, that match was one of the year's best as well, but the music set it up perfectly. It always helps when your opponent is Triple H, as nearly everyone loves his entrance even if they hate him. But at Wrestlemania and Backlash, Batista's boring tune deflated me immediately. At Vengeance, I felt much more excited. Having said that, Josey Scott was thankfully not in the audience that night otherwise I might have jumped out of a window.
Conversely, Mister Kennedy's change in music IS, indisputably, "change for the sake of change". Even worse was that they didn't ENDORSE it whatsoever, like they did with Hardy. There was no mention of the album when Kennedy entered, so if the point wasn't to shove it down our throats at every opportunity, then why even change Kennedy's music at all? Looking at the response to it, all I saw on Youtube were comments that said things along the lines of "I liked Kennedy's old music a lot better". None of these people even seemed remotely aware of the motivation for this adjustment. WWE have failed miserably on this occasion, although at least Kennedy's currently being booked pretty well otherwise.
Funnily enough, this reminded me of when they attempted to change Randy Orton's music to that Killswitch Engage song. The fans shit on it, and rightfully so. I think the belief was that ‘Burn In My Light' sounded too heroic to be a heel's theme, but there was one problem with that logic – Orton had already been using that song as a heel for over a year! Talk about missing the boat. When I see Randy Orton, if I'm a bit bored during one of his promos (this doesn't normally happen, in all fairness), I'll just start singing the song to myself because they go hand-in-hand now as far as I'm concerned. Luckily, ‘This Fire Burns' was retired after one week in favour of Orton's more familiar Mercy Drive hit, and it was later brought back for CM Punk who it is FAR more suited for. Oh, and the ultimate irony of that? CM Punk is a fucking babyface using music designed to make an existing heel more heelish! And it works! You have to admire how it comes full circle like that.
Speaking of using music to coincide with a character turn, look at Finlay. His old music was awesome. "My name is Finlay, and I love to fight! Dun dun duuuuuuuuh, dun dun duuuuuuuuh, duh-nuh-nuuuuuh, nuuuh, dun-dun duuuuuh". Can't get any better than that. But now what? He comes out to fucking Hornswoggle's music. What's the point? Obviously, WWE felt that they needed Finlay to be seen as a full-on good guy (though thankfully, he's still a ‘badass'), so they felt the best way to do this was to have his music be really jolly instead of slow and deliberate. Or perhaps they didn't feel it was Irish enough before, when it really was. Whatever the reason, the decision was made and it was a bad one. And why was it a bad decision?
Because it basically states that Hornswoggle is more valuable to the company right now than Finlay. He's the one supposed to be Vince's son, after all. But he's also Finlay's leprechaun. So I guess it was determined, a good twenty months or so after Hornswoggle debuted, that they suddenly needed the same music. You know, in case we forget they're friends. The fact they're involved in every angle together and are the only two Micks in the company wouldn't be enough. We need our arses wiped for us by the hand that feeds. Or something. I hope it's not the same hand, anyway. But I just find that kind of insulting, you know? Hornswoggle was brought in after Finlay, as a comedy showpiece prop no less, and now it's HIS music they have to share. I think those rather optimistic "Finlay for World Champion" campaigners may now have to face the music (pun intended). **I must say though, since I'm omitting ‘Titbits' this week, that I think the advancement of the Hornswoggle/Vince/Finlay/and now JBL plot was absolutely top-notch this week. Some of the comedy has been inept, but I'm astonished that they were able to make this serious. I credit Finlay's tremendous acting for most of that.**
To be fair to Kennedy's crappy new entrance, it does get the most important aspect spot-on – the introduction. For me, the first few seconds of an entrance song needs to be so memorable, and so recognisable, that you instantaneously know who it is and what that person's agenda is. Now in all honesty, with Kennedy's entrance this has nothing to do with the music itself. It's just the same clip of him shouting ‘Kennedy' as he had with his old music. But it's still better than if it was JUST the music. I can imagine that would bury Kennedy within the minds of some fans more than any televised loss. Jeff's music doesn't have that same quality, but what it does do is pretty much recreate the first few bars of his previous Hardy Boyz entrance, so there's no question as to who it is coming down the isle. The big emblem on the screen followed by a Swanton Bomb and the words ‘Jeff Hardy' flashing to epileptic levels undoubtedly have a similar effect, though. But I think I'm already tied up enough thinking about music right now. Videos can wait for another day – presumably when WWE releases a DVD called ‘WWE: The Videos, Volume One' and starts changing shit up to reflect that.
Randy Orton's music begins with that distorted chord which, when coupled with the gold-tinted image of Orton standing on the turnbuckle with his arms spread, is now imprinted on my mind just as much as the lyrics. On the subject of the auditory intros matching the film, I think the Royal Rumble was the first time I've seen the beginning of Cena's video. Usually, they're showing the crowd when his music starts because they always explode one way or another. I was surprised when it was just slow-motion footage of his chest, although it's not like I'd built myself up for anything else because I just hadn't really thought about it. Triple H's Motörhead theme is now legendary, and the opening strum is always a guilty pleasure of mine. I also like the green lighting and colour-scheme he uses. Santino's music is another one that you get straight away, although that's really because you hear it and you think "Italian…oh, Santino". You're not likely to actually remember it afterwards.
Most of the Divas music sucks monkey fuck, which is a shame compared to some of the really good stuff that the ladies came out to in the attitude era. Chyna's music in particular, regardless of what you think of the woman herself (but yes, she is a woman), was very distinctive in a good way. Now, we've got all these fucking Destiny's Child wannabes telling us to "holla, holla!" for Kelly Kelly of all people while Teddy Long and Scott Steiner cry themselves to sleep, and the god-awful Candice Michelle travesty. And why the fuck did Christy Hemme use ‘Walk, Idiot, Walk' by The Hives when she was there? I actually like The Hives, especially that song, but why would you use an already-released single? Especially when you're a happy-go-lucky babyface (at the time), and you're either insinuating that you're an idiot or you're commanding your ‘idiot' audience to walk. Either way, it added absolutely nothing to her character. All it said was "I couldn't think of anything for myself, so I just listened to the radio for a bit and picked the song I hated the least". Or, in reality, "We (the WWE) couldn't think of anything for Christy, so we used The Hives because they're friends of ours. But we didn't bother asking for a new song, because we're under immense pressure to make this Diva Search rookie seem credible ASAP". And yeah, I realise others have pretty much done the same thing, but at least when Hulk Hogan used Jimi Hendrix's ‘Voodoo Child', and The Sandman used ‘Enter Sandman' by Metallica, the fucking songs weren't IN THE CHARTS AT THAT TIME. Ugh…
**Memo to self: Do NOT abruptly reminisce of Undertaker's use of both Kid Rock and Limp Bizkit singles (albeit remixed especially for him), as you enjoyed these and you do not want to appear hypocritical.** Yep, using chart hits is a bad idea. It is abhorrent. La-dee-da…
With all of this said, here are a few others that deserve a mention. As it's the Academy Awards this week, I'll present a few e-wards myself based on my own judgments. Bear in mind I'm only covering WWE, WCW and TNA, although mostly WWE.
Most disastrous attempt to change someone's entrance music
The nominees were the aforementioned Orton/Killswitch Engage experiment, Chris Jericho's use of a Saliva song, Crash Holly (R.I.P.) under the ‘Version One' banner, Big Show's hip-hop music (which I actually liked), and Kurt Angle's short-term usage of a nu-metal version of his classic tune entitled ‘I Don't Suck'. Of these, I choose Chris Jericho adopting Saliva's ‘King of My World'. Saliva and WWE had a good relationship, and in fact Saliva performed two songs at Wrestlemania X-8. So I can understand why they'd have their song showcased on television. But while this song wasn't bad, the transition suffered in the same way Orton's did – everyone loved the old song, and there was no logical reason to change it other than a gratuitous shake-up. However, this pips Orton to the post because at least Orton had used several songs beforehand, whereas Jericho had been using ‘Break Down The Walls' since his debut. The whole thing was clearly just a corporate tactic to shell a couple more discs, which thankfully disintegrated rather quickly because the audience refused to bite. As mentioned earlier, Saliva performed Batista's swank music so obviously no hard feelings are shared (pun intended – ‘No Hard Feelings' is one of their tracks).
Winner: Chris Jericho in 2002 (James A. Johnston to Saliva)
Most boring entrance music
Brock Lesnar's nondescript WWE music was simplistic to a level of burlesque, but it had a bit of personality to it. Torrie's is mind-numbingly dreary, but it's never been featured that heavily apart from the one time Lilian Garcia sang it live. The Rock's music as the Corporate Champion was probably awesome at the time, and was full of his catchphrases, but it didn't age well and it irks me to tears listening to it after his superior themes as a face…or even when he was heel again in 2003, and that's saying something because that music was slooow and had that fucking huge helicopter sequence beforehand. And Christian's current music is just there, it only bores me when I think about it otherwise I don't notice it much. All these four were short-listed by yours truly, but the easy winner was Undertaker at Judgment Day 2002. It was the slowest, blandest, most repetitive and anti-climactic change I've ever heard, and even worse was that he debuted it for the match in which he defeated Hogan for the WWE Undisputed World Heavyweight Championship. Thankfully, it wasn't intended to stay like that for long, and soon Undertaker had a redone version with that awesome guitar solo, and later ‘You're Gonna Pay' which was the original version but with singing. The fact it evolved into two decent entrances means that I can't in all good conscience call it a futile attempt. But, on this one night at Judgment Day, I couldn't have felt more apoplectic.
Winner: Undertaker at Judgment Day 2002
Worst entrance music presently used
I was going to give it to the Zach Ryder and Curt Hawkins, until I realised that it's not the nothing of a song that I detest so much – it's the video. The same two-second film of them staring into the camera and shuffling in a faux-menacing way, looped four times before their names come up on the screen, and it just repeats without even any footage of them in the ring. Truly, the most asinine video I've ever seen for a guy or a team being taken as seriously as the Rated RMY. Others I had in mind were two obvious choices in Candice's fuck-awful pseudo-dance shit, and the ‘Finlay' theme which we already discussed. And, Super Crazy's song…or, rather, THE LACK OF IT! But, in the end, there could only be one winner. No other amalgamation of two sure-fire can't-miss things has resulted in such an uninhabitable entertainment quagmire. You've got Maria Kanellis, who is probably the hottest piece in the company although Kelly Kelly's a close second in my view. You've got Zebrahead – ZEBRAHEAD – who are the absolute shit when they get it right. And the result is a turd of a song, a safe pop-punk creation so pedestrian that even Simple ‘How Could This Happen to Me?' Plan would politely decline a listen to. I understand that the song was originally written for Stacy Keibler, but she left before she could use it. Quite frankly, I don't blame her. It's horrific. Again, I must question how Zebrahead – ZEBRA! HEAD! – could fuck this up so badly. Words fail me.
Winner: Maria Kanellis, ‘With Legs Like That' (Zebrahead)
Worst entrance music EVER
Technically, the worst ever is probably either Gillberg's theme or the cover of ‘We're Not Gonna Take It' that David Arquette used. But Gillberg had the hilarious fake chants and the shitty glowsticks, and the whole David Arquette thing gets enough bad press as it is. Other nominees would be Dean Malenko's horrendous ‘Double-Ho Seven' motif, and the short-lived Just Joe's song which doesn't even seem to have a name so I call it ‘Just Jiz' as a tribute to Spinal Tap's brilliant ‘Shit Sandwich' joke. All of these four songs are worse than the one I have chosen as songs. But the one I'm giving the nod to, ‘I'm a Bad Man', did more than any of these put together to ruin my perception of the person using it. And that's a bold statement, since Dean Malenko's career was dead in the water almost the second he started coming out to his James Bond parody. At least Dean wasn't in the main event, though (and that's the only time you'll hear his main-event stardom deficiency being praised on these pages). ‘I'm a Bad Man' was used by Rikishi when he was a heel, and I believe it's him rapping on it. It's not awful, but it's pretty droning. However, I chose it because Rikishi turned heel on the premise that "I did it for the people. I did it for you, Rock". So in other words, he was apparently a bit of a sympathetic sort, which would have been more entertaining. And his new music should have reflected that. Instead, he starts using a very mediocre, uninspired rap about how he likes women, cars and pain. I could forgive the cars part because he ran Steve Austin down in one, but seriously now…this song was beyond nob-jockeytastic. It even made me cringe just watching it back to check it was really that horrible. Just dire.
Winner: Rikishi's heel theme
Most successful attempt to change someone's entrance music
This is more difficult to rate than its opposite, because it's hard to tell if it's going down well or not. So I'll base it on how fitting the change was and how much it helped the wrestler's character. For all the shit I've given Orton's one week with Killswitch Engage, his switch from Motörhead to Mercy Drive was excellent and worked with the whole getting-chucked-out-of-Evolution-and-seeking-revenge thing he had going on. Others would be Christian's ‘At Last You're On Your Own', JBL's conversion from brawling redneck to self-made millionaire, and Billy Gunn during "the faggot years" as they're so fondly remembered by many. I'm giving my pick though to Edge changing from ‘You Think You Know Me' to ‘Never Gonna Stop' during his initial singles' push. Christian had turned on Edge, but Christian already had separate music from Edge, so there was no real prerequisite for a change on Edge's part. However, WWE went out of their way to give Edge the cheesiest, most likeable metal song they could find that – importantly – wasn't already familiar with the casual audience despite already being available. Thus, everybody profited. Edge's babyface status was cemented, WWE had improved associations with yet another musician, and Rob himself probably sold a good few more records and got increased download traffic. Especially from people SICKENED by the remixed mockery that was on WWF's own ‘Forceable Entry'.
Winner: Edge in 2001 (James A. Johnston to Rob Zombie)
Most infectious entrance music
For this, I'm excluding ‘Rollin'' because it's not limited to wrestling. So my nominees are ‘Sexy Boy', ‘The Game', Kurt Angle's WWE theme, Steve Austin's Attitude era theme, and ‘Real American'. It has to be ‘Sexy Boy' from this lot. Angle's was annoyingly catchy, but it loses MAJOR points because it wasn't even recorded originally for Angle – it was used by ‘The Patriot' Del Wilkes more than two years prior. The others are pretty close, and ‘Real American' would likely fare better if I wasn't British. But really, which song is as brilliantly memorable and nauseatingly beguiling as Shawn Michaels's? It just works. If he's a heel it gets over how arrogant he is, and when he's a face it displays how charming and cheeky he is. I didn't like the Sensational Sherri original (though, naturally, I heard the Michaels one first), but I'm guessing I'm not the only one and that's why it was re-recorded. The song was too good to just throw away, so Michaels himself had the honour of ‘singing' about how attractive he finds himself and how much pleasure he takes from making women cum. It should be embarrassingly bad, but the tune is so easy to grasp and tacky with the campy synth that the whole thing falls into place brilliantly. And the biggest indication of how excellent this song is? He's still using it well over a decade later, and it's still just as enjoyable. While others have come and gone, ‘Sexy Boy' has survived like a melodious parasite.
Winner: Shawn Michaels, ‘Sexy Boy' (Shawn's version – I'm not keen on Sherri's one)
Best entrance music presently used
Randy Orton's an obvious contender, as is Triple H. John Cena, though I'm not a huge fan of his music (I've heard worse, I've heard better, you know how it is) also gets marks for using his own track, and John Morrison's is pretty cool as well. This one, though, isn't all that close. Silkk the Shocker's ‘I'm Comin'', used by Montel Vontavious Porter, is my favourite. It's got the distinctive introduction with the ticking clock, then it's got the small down-time before it thrusts into the main rhythm. The sight of MVP jumping out of that inflatable arch thingy as "AHM COMIN!1!!" is yelled into the arena is just a sweet visual, as is the timing of his pyrotechnic to coincide with the end of the opening chorus and into the first verse. But what I really love about it is how apt it is. Now, obviously there's the fact that MVP is physically coming down to the ring. But there's also the fact that MVP is progressing like crazy and fast becoming one of Smackdown's bigger talents, so he's "comin'" in the figurative sense as well. Compare that to Mark Henry's all-too flamboyant mish-mash. You'd think it would be the other way around, Henry has the more understated song and MVP gets the "bop bop bo" crap because he's more charismatic and slender. But thankfully not, and MVP's music makes him look like the star he is. I just hope that if (or maybe when) MVP turns face that they don't change the song, because it strikes me as being a real battler's music.
Winner: MVP, ‘I'm Comin'' (Silkk the Shocker)
Best entrance music EVER
This, and the Worst Entrance Ever category, will likely receive the most feedback and that's fine. There are just so many to choose from, here. So many, in fact, that I'm not going to even list any nominations. I'm just going to go out on a limb and tell you what my preference is. It's not easy, and it's not even the best in terms of following the formula, but it's the coolest in my eyes and that's enough for me. Undertaker's Attitude era theme. I've linked it below for you to listen to, if you're not sure which one I mean. He had a few during that time, but this was his best. I mean, it's just great. Playing WWF Attitude and hearing this was just a constant stream of joy. He didn't use it for long, and it didn't do anything to alter him in any significant way, but it's just a brilliant track. I don't even have any more to say on it, just go and mark out to it this moment.
I will add that I was planning on awarding for Most/Least Suitable, as well. But I couldn't really garner many nominations, and the results seem obvious – Hulk Hogan's ‘Real American' (well, he is. You can't argue with that – he is, indeed, American. Really, he is), and the already-addressed Hemme/Hives debacle. Anyway, this wasn't meant to be a project, so I'll move on.
So what have we learned here? That music isn't just a nice little extra, it can absolute define the talent. I think we all knew this anyway, but it was interesting for me to put my ideas to paper (well, screen) and realise just how much I cared about it. And, whether it's good or whether it's bad, entrance music can always be a talking point.
Having said that, let's hope it won't have to be for a while. Kennedy…
Huh? I don't get it. It wasn't posted as a response to somebody else's comment. I guess he meant the video sucks, or maybe he meant Flair sucks, but because it's so pathetically minimal it's difficult to tell what this TWENTY-FOUR year old was trying to say here. The Dutch really do not give a good account of themselves on Youtube. Which saddens me, as I've always liked Holland. Oh well.
Oooh, yeah!
And that's it for another week. It was good fun looking back at all the music that used to either drive me nuts or have me playing air drums. Who knows what developments will arise within the next week for me to look at.
Your taste with Limp Bizkit and Kid Rock actually show in the rest of your results, so I can't be mad at you. Well, I can... but then it would be misplaced anger towards an internet columnist, and we all know that THAT isn't possible, right?
... right?
Good work. I don't agree with any of your picks, but you have some well thought out reasoning behind them, so kudos.
Posted By: LatinoMeat (Guest) on February 22, 2008 at 03:41 PM
Worst change of music had to be when they changed Austin's music in 2001, to try and make him more heelish. It was seriously a dirge!
Worst music ever-Bastion Booger. Sure, fart noises and burps fit his character, but come on!
Most Boring Music-The Goon. If they played the first part of the "Charge" theme over and over at a hockey game (without getting to the "Charge!" part) the fans would be booing their own team!
Posted By: Dave (Guest) on February 22, 2008 at 03:49 PM
IMO, the best theme out there now is Santino Marrella's. The Opera mixed with the rock guitar is great.
Posted By: Flyboy (Guest) on February 22, 2008 at 03:53 PM
Finlay and the midget aren't the only two Micks in the company. Foley's still there. Sorry, as half an Irishman myself, I had to. Couldn't resist.
Posted By: the Mad Redneck (Guest) on February 22, 2008 at 04:05 PM
I think the best Entrance Music EVER would have to be L.O.D.'s. Nothing beats "OOOOHHH WHAT A RUSH"
Posted By: That Fat Guy (Guest) on February 22, 2008 at 04:20 PM
Hollywood Hogan's use of Jimi Hendrix's 'Voodoo Chile' was pretty awesome.
Posted By: Guest#8831 (Guest) on February 22, 2008 at 04:20 PM
Worst change ever was when they changed Sting's mysterious piece to the rock based crap towards the end of WCW.
Also Cena's theme has nothing on his old one. I blame that change for all the hate he now gets.
Posted By: Tom (Guest) on February 22, 2008 at 04:45 PM
I agree that Marella's music is awesome, and I always balk at the TV when there's a groan from the announcers whenever it plays! Of course, that's in-character, but it still rules.
Also, Beth Phoenix's music is absolutely awesome, if totally tacky at the same time. More the awesome. And it sounds like Steamboat's 'Dragon' music.
Posted By: Jonny Boy (Guest) on February 22, 2008 at 04:46 PM
I love William Regal's current music. Diabese's is the best ever.
Posted By: Greg (Guest) on February 22, 2008 at 04:53 PM
IIRC, the reason Hemme used the Hives theme was it was the official theme song of that year's Diva Search. Otherwise, she would have been given one of the generic "look at my hooters" theme songs.
Posted By: Bring the Pain (Guest) on February 22, 2008 at 04:55 PM
Great article. Just wanted to add my two cents. "Enter the Sandman" has to be one of the greatest enterence themes of all time. Just rewatch Sandman's One Night Stand 2005 entrance to see why.
For effectiveness, I gotta give props to Billy and Chuck's "You Look So Good to Me." If the boy-band music didn't want to make you hate them, nothing would.
I hated Trish Stratus's "Rock and Roll" theme. I cringed every time I heard that annoying giggle. Though I suppose Stephanie's "All Grown Up" as a whole was worse.
And I may be alone in this, but I loved the Corporate Ministry remix of "No Chance in Hell."
Posted By: LZ (Guest) on February 22, 2008 at 05:02 PM
I couldn't agree more with your choice of the Undertaker's Attitude Era Theme,is also my favourite and it is the BEST entrance music EVER! In my opinion he should still use it today... Is current theme is kind of boring.
Posted By: Kristi (Guest) on February 22, 2008 at 05:07 PM
Hardy's new music couldnt be worse if he wrote himself.. ..which I thought he did till they told me otherwise..
Posted By: RedMaiden (Guest) on February 22, 2008 at 05:08 PM
Beth Pheonix used to have a cool rock theme but I hate the new one. She should have a tough rugged theme not this glam theme. i know she is the Glamazon but she is tougher then she is fashionable. Also, Victoria used to have the fast "I Ain't the Lady to Mess With" theme which is better than her slow heel one.
Posted By: The Real SAVE_TNA_222 (Guest) on February 22, 2008 at 05:32 PM
Pretty sure the worst entrance music ever was when they had teh Superstars record it themselves ... Booker, the Dudleys, everyone except Angle's (which was hilarious). How about Big Show's acoustic theme? That sucked giant nuts. Speaking of Giant Nuts, Balls Mahoney coming out to BIG BALLS by AC/DC is the best entrance music EVER. And howcome no love for Edge's current theme? I can't think of a song in the current era that captures a character better.
Other props: "Pomp & Circumstance" for Savage, "Thus Spake Zarathustra" for Flair, and "Honky Honky Burning Love" for Wayne Ferris & Peggy Sue Hart.
Posted By: Guest#2599 (Guest) on February 22, 2008 at 05:39 PM
Another thought on the worst current one, Carlito's theme. It would be good, except they didn't bother to make it long enough for him to get down to the ring before it loops, it'd be like Austin getting halfway down the ramp, his music fading and the glass breaking again, not as effective really is it?
Also about Jeff Hardy's new music, it's a decent track, and starts with similar notes, but it's changed genres. One of the things I liked about his old one, even if it was just stock music, was it wasn't yet ANOTHER rock song, it was high energy dance music, helped to distinguish it.
All time bests not mentioned so far, Slick, Mr. Perfect, Demolition and THE FABULOUS ROUGEAU BROTHERS All American Boys!
Posted By: Robin (Guest) on February 22, 2008 at 05:39 PM
Anyone remember, I think it was in '03, when they changed Christian's AWESOME rock-opra theme to some generic electric guitar mess that you'd expect to hear for the entrance of a dark-match jobber? I was bewildered as all hell regarding that change, to the extent that I, y'know, still remember it. Also, I think WWE not being able to use "Enter Sandman" for Sandman's entrance slowly sucked the life out the character for his duration with the company. Good thing on the Xbox 360 version of Smackdown/Raw 2008, I can upload and use the real deal for Sandman's theme.
Posted By: KanyonKreist (Registered) on February 22, 2008 at 05:41 PM
Undertaker's Attitude Era theme has always been a favourite of mine.
Others I feel worth mentioned - how about the soaring Corporate Ministry theme? Mark Henry's theme has also grown on me a lot, easily the best he's had.
Posted By: Ryushinku (Guest) on February 22, 2008 at 05:58 PM
On second thought Vince MaCmahons new theme is beast
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zvzVrh6dQVI&feature=related
Posted By: That Fat Guy (Guest) on February 22, 2008 at 06:06 PM
Taker has always had the best entrances/music. Still does.
Doink the Clown's music was fun.
I think Deuce and Dominoes music/entrance is underrated.
Posted By: JLAJRC (Guest) on February 22, 2008 at 06:10 PM
Nothing will ever beat DEMOLITION!!! You could always have The Million Dollar Man or Mr. Perfect.
Posted By: Capt. Smooth (Guest) on February 22, 2008 at 06:34 PM
Favorite current music: Biscuits and Gravy for Festus & Jesse.
Favorite all time: gotta go with the Outsiders or Sting's oriignal WCW theme music.
Posted By: JMASCORPIO (Guest) on February 22, 2008 at 06:39 PM
I've always loved Kane's theme music Slow Chemical by Finger Eleven...but the Undertaker has always had the greatest entrances ever...
Posted By: Cheryl (Guest) on February 22, 2008 at 06:54 PM
I wish they switched Undertaker back to that music at WM24,IMO that music would add so much more intensity to The Undertaker overall,instead of "oh here's taker and his 20 min stroll to the ring". It would be perfect timing for the switch to go along with what should be a long title reign barring he gets injured again. not the best music ever but as far as far Undertaker themes go, I say hell yes it is. plus they've been using the same video that accompanied that music for yrs. it'd be sick they could do all sorts of crazy strobe shit at the beginning then go totally black for like 3 seconds have a fat pyro explosion when the song picks up and continue with the flame deal they've been doing lately. I could go on but undertaker could use a change up more than Kennedy
Posted By: marty (Guest) on February 22, 2008 at 11:37 PM
Beth Phoenix's music is hecka cool. It's not a Monday Night RAW unless I hear it at least once.
Posted By: Spinner Belt Holder (Guest) on February 22, 2008 at 11:59 PM
The worst theme is Maria BY FAR. My favorite theme is the original mix of Steve Austin's now iconic theme. I believe th original mix was called Hell Frozen Over. The guitar riff was better, and it had harder drums. Undertaker's Ministry theme was awesome too. However, THE BEST song was Triple H's first theme, My Time.
Posted By: JJ (Guest) on February 23, 2008 at 12:56 AM
For humorous reasons, I also liked Mark Henry's Sexual Chocolate music. They should have Big Daddy V and Mark Henry do the overweight lover gimmicks again and have them come out to that.
Posted By: JJ (Guest) on February 23, 2008 at 01:09 AM
And I'm APALLED that nobody mentioned Owen Hart's theme. That was SWANK.
Posted By: JJ (Guest) on February 23, 2008 at 01:10 AM
I love Undertaker's attitude themes. My favorite revision has to be the one he used at Fully Loaded 98. Then Jim Johnston switched to the version you linked to.
I think Jim still loves the theme since he snuck a little of the riff in the middle of Taker's current theme (at least the one on the Volume 6 CD).
Posted By: Internet Jesus (Guest) on February 23, 2008 at 01:47 AM
C'mon...three words.
The Fabulous Rougeaus!
"We're just the All-American Boys..."
Try and not sing that all day tomorrow.
Posted By: Burton (Guest) on February 23, 2008 at 03:44 AM
I think the candidates you chose for "Most Infectious" were some great ones, and the one you picked was great, too. But I feel like there are so many more themes that fall into that category. Just to name a few off the top of my head: NWO, DX, The Rock (any version from Volume 4 to now), D'Lo Brown (the Volume 4 version? Seriously!), The Godfather, Gangrel, Goldust, RVD's "One of a Kind" theme, Christian's "At Last" theme (my God, that was addictive), the theme Big Show had before his current one, and definitely Goldberg's WCW theme.
I don't know if Booker T's original theme would count, but I thought it was definitely a crowd-hyper.
Speaking of Booker T and failed theme changes that were only done to shill another CD - remember the days of the RVD/Booker T team and Booker's music was changed to his Originals tune - "Can You Dig It?" Granted, I kinda like the song, but I felt it just didn't have the atmosphere to be a theme.
And btw, I think it's just criminal - CRIMINAL - not even considering William Regal's "Real Man's Man" theme for the best ever... okay, I'm joking, but it's like a minute and a half of cheesy fun regardless.
Posted By: justwaveyourhandsintheair (Guest) on February 23, 2008 at 04:03 AM
Great column, I agree with most of your observations here.
I always thought when Hulk Hogan came into WCW, "American Made" was AWFUL. Granted, it's on one of the worst albums you'll ever hear (Hulk Rules...I could go on for days on this album alone). I mean, lyrics like "If you mess with the flag it's like a slap in his face" were just horrible.
Balls Mahoney with AC/DC is a classic for ECW fans. I also really liked RVD coming out to the "Walk" cover - but then again, I like the song.
Posted By: ICTimer (Guest) on February 23, 2008 at 04:19 AM
Bet music ever has to be Vince McMahons. Its a no-brainer...
NO CHANCE IN HELL!!!
Is oozes awesome
Worst - Anything to do with Undrtaker/Biker gimmick
Catchy - Goldberg, dun du duhhh dun dun duhhh dun dun duh dun duh du du GOLDBERG *pyro*
Great column as usual
Posted By: Brad (Guest) on February 23, 2008 at 07:58 AM
Victoria coming out to Tatu's All the Things She Said was class.
Rolling was ONLY a good song because Taker came out to it.
And the est entrance theme ever is still Evolution.
Posted By: Dr Domino (Guest) on February 23, 2008 at 08:03 AM
That old 'Taker theme still gives me the chills when I hear it. Kudos to your taste, sir.
Posted By: Owain J. Brimfield (Registered) on February 23, 2008 at 08:45 AM
I liked the version of Undertaker's music from 1995-1998. Even though it's technically the same song he has now, it was unexplainably better than his current one.
Posted By: JJ (Guest) on February 23, 2008 at 11:18 AM
I know this was a WWE only column... but how could ANY wrestling music discussion go on this long without SOMEONE mentioning the greatest wrestling song of ALL time...
BADSTREET USA!!!
C'MON people... get with the program!
BAD STREEEEEEEEEEEET ATLANTA GA!!!
Did I just date myself with that? Jesus I feel old.
Posted By: Rollz (Guest) on February 23, 2008 at 11:36 AM
orton has the best music. but the overall package, is batista. he has the best entrance hands down. the music, pyro and his faux machine gun gets me amped everytime. i am not even a batista fan.
Posted By: rey (Guest) on February 23, 2008 at 12:21 PM
Move in now move out
Hands up now hands down
Back up back up
Tell me what you're gonna do now
Keep rollin' rollin' rollin' rollin'
Posted By: Jeff Small (Registered) on February 23, 2008 at 01:09 PM
I listened to kennedy's new theme. It isn't bad, it's exactly the same as his old one. it's just a bit faster.
Posted By: Jay (Guest) on February 23, 2008 at 03:02 PM
I think for argument's sake who could forget DDP's "Self-High Five" right before the Smells Like Teen Spirit beat would come up?
One entrance music I think is underrated is Robert Roode's from TNA and the original LAX when Konnan was around.
Posted By: Orlando (Guest) on February 23, 2008 at 03:18 PM
Best entrance music EVER - my vote goes for DEMOLITION - especially when they drew 1 & 2 in the Rumble. That worked so well.
Most infectious? - Disco Inferno's from WCW.
But there was only one PERFECT entrance theme (okay - until WCW used it for other people).
And I've just thought of Razor Ramon's too - hell - entrance themes aren't what they used to be.
Posted By: Rob (Guest) on February 23, 2008 at 08:15 PM
Best/most suited to character entrance music in:
WWE:
Gangrel
The Conman
Taker's American Badass Kid Rock theme
TNA:
Pacman Jones
Angle
Abyss
ROH:
Samoa Joe - I'm Gonna knock you out.
Bryan Danielson - The Final Countdown.
Colt Cabana - Copa Cabana remix
Posted By: Chris (Guest) on February 25, 2008 at 06:04 AM
How can you forget "Whatever" Benoit's theme?
Posted By: Arnab Saha (Guest) on February 25, 2008 at 11:55 AM
LOD coming into Iron Man was one of the greatest entrance songs. Especially in their pre-WWF/E days. You KNEW someone was going to get an assbeating when that music hit and they ran out to the ring and attacked.
Posted By: Gay Mysterio (Guest) on February 25, 2008 at 12:27 PM
"CHRISTIAN! CHRISTIAN!
Posted By: Guest#0769 (Guest) on February 25, 2008 at 06:08 PM
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