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James Alan Johnston (born June 19, 1952 [1]) is an American music composer and musician best known for his time with professional wrestling promotion, WWE.Over the course of three decades, he composed and recorded entrance theme music for the promotion's wrestlers, and compilations of his music released by WWE charted highly in several countries.
WWF Full Metal: The Album was the first album released with the new focus, and included the Monday Night Raw theme "Thorn in Your Eye" by Slam Jam, a supergroup composed of members of metal bands Anthrax, Savatage, Pro-Pain, and Overkill. [10] In October, the album reached No. 184 on the Billboard 200 and by 2002, had sold 173,000 copies. [10]
Like the group's three previous albums, To Our Children's Children's Children is a concept album with a common theme that ties the songs together. For Children, the band was inspired by the space race and the July 1969 Apollo 11 moon landing, which occurred during the album's sessions.
Much of the music industry heaved a collective sigh of relief when the news broke Thursday that Ed Sheeran was found not liable on a copyright claim alleging that he copied key elements from the ...
"Loud" is a song co-written and recorded by Canadian country artist Tim Hicks. [1] The track was produced by Todd Clark, who co-wrote the track with Hicks, Gavin Slate, and Travis Wood. [ 2 ] The track was the lead single off Hicks' fourth studio album New Tattoo .
Around 1976, Chris Colt started using "Welcome To My Nightmare" as his entrance theme and "No More Mr. Nice Guy" as his exit theme, both songs made by Alice Cooper. Sgt. Slaughter, who has sometimes claimed to have introduced the idea to Vincent J. McMahon, entered to the "Marines' Hymn" at a Madison Square Garden show in the 1970s. [2]
The track was covered by The Crew-Cuts, who took the song to the top of the charts, arguably registering the first U.S. rock and roll number one hit record. [ 2 ] The enthusiasm doo-wop fans had for the Chords' music was dampened when Gem Records claimed that one of the groups on its roster was called the Chords; consequently the group changed ...
The song ends abruptly as a policeman calls the father with the news that his 17-year-old son is dead from an overdose. [ 1 ] "Once You Understand" started getting airplay in late 1971, hitting number one at stations KQV in Pittsburgh and WIXY in Cleveland ; nationally, it made it to No. 23 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in early 1972, [ 2 ...