5 Least Threatening WWE Entrance Themes

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A wrestler’s entrance theme is synonymous with their character and an essential part of launching a successful run. After all, a wrestler’s music is one of the first chances for the WWE Universe to connect with their underlying persona and gimmick. More often than not, it’s the difference between getting an audience excited and putting them to sleep.

The best wrestling themes are timeless. Like your parents and the JFK assassination, you can’t help but remember where you were when you first heard them. Even after all these years, the booming sound of The Rock or 'Stone Cold' Steve Austin’s entrance music can still send an arena full of fans into a frenzy.

Yet despite the importance of picking engaging songs for their superstars, WWE history is full of solid performers whose potential was derailed by dodgy entrance themes. Whether they waded into the realm of novelty, toilet humour, or just plain sucked, these entrance themes failed to help wrestlers electrify audiences around the world and strike fear into the hearts of their opponents.

Here are five WWE entrance themes that struggled to keep anyone down for a three count…

5. The Allied Powers

When Lex Luger and “The British Bulldog” Davey Boy Smith started tagging together as the Allied Powers in early 1995 with little fanfare or buildup, both men faced the grim prospect of putting their career aspirations on pause. Nothing says “creative has nothing for you” like a filler tag team with no direction. So began a lost weekend of muscle flexing and shallow patriotism, but, hey, at least we had the music, right? Hmm, now that you mention it…

Making their pay-per-view debut at WrestleMania XI in a winning effort against the Blu Brothers, audiences were treated to the Allied Powers’ new theme, a bizarre mashup of Luger’s latest WWE entrance music and “Rule, Britannia!”, an homage to Smith’s native UK.

Like much of the WWE’s New Generation era, the Allied Powers’ entrance music was a mess of clashing genres and obnoxious beats masquerading as rhythm. Aside from a failed title shot at In Your House 2, the team never quite clicked. After a loss to Men on a Mission and teasing an impending collision between Luger and Smith, the Allied Powers quietly surrendered in late summer 1995. Named in honour of the Anglo-American alliance during the Second World War, revisiting Luger and Smith’s Allied Powers will make you question everything and wonder why you’re not speaking German. Man in the High Castle, eat your heart out!

Contributor

Private investigator and writer based in Vancouver, Canada. Fond of history, professional wrestling, and rock hubris. Once co-directed a Star Trek fan film with a budget of less than $200.