10 WWE Superstars You Forgot Sang Their Own Entrance Music

5. Road Dogg Jesse James

After Piledriver, the company took several years off from releasing studio albums. Not withstanding 1993's WrestleMania: The Album which excluded wrestler themes, the next album to feature entrance music was 1996's Full Metal: The Album. This CD included the track With My Baby Tonight which was the focal point of a scrapped storyline from the year prior.

In 1995, Jesse James (Road Dogg) was working as Jeff Jarrett's "Roadie" and an on-screen break-up was planned for July's In Your House. The split was supposed to lead towards the big reveal that the country single's true vocalist was James, not Jarrett. Ironically, both men quit the promotion, reportedly due to creative plans (read: their split), before the angle could be filmed. When James returned to the company as 'The Real Double J', the revelation occurred but under a much smaller spotlight since Jarrett was now in WCW.

James used the infamous tune as his entrance music, many times singing it live. While he would eventually provide, ahem, "vocals" for his more well known New Age Outlaws theme, it was a much different performance than With My Baby Tonight.

Contributor
Contributor

A former stuntman for Paramount Pictures, Matt enjoys sports, water skiing, driving fast, the beach, professional wrestling, technology, and scotch. At the same time, whenever possible. Having attended many famous (and infamous) shows including WrestleMania XV, In Your House: Mind Games, and the 1995 King of the Ring, Matt has been a lifelong professional sports and wrestling fan. Matt's been mentioned in numerous wrestling podcasts including the Steve Austin Show: Unleashed, Talk Is Jericho, and Something To Wrestle With Bruce Prichard. As a former countywide performer, Matt has been referred to as Mr. 300 for his amazing accomplishments in the world of amateur bowling. He is also the only man on record to have pitched back-to-back no hitters in the Veterans Stadium Wiffle Ball League of 2003.