The Ex-Bombers on Writing Jim Cornette's Podcast Theme, Jeremiah Plunkett's Theme, Creativity
Hi everyone!
My guests on today's episode are the unbelievably creative and spiffing chaps in The Ex-Bombers! You may know some of their work from their work on The Jim Cornette Experience's theme, as well as Jeremiah Plunkett's theme in NWA wrestling. We talk all about their process in working on these themes, as well as talk about their own original music and their wild instruments like an 8 string bass. We also talk about how they approach their overall creative vision, as they are unbelievably involved in all facets of their videos, music, and art!
We also play our favorite game on the show, Music City Rumble, where The Ex-Bombers name the musicians they'd book in a wrestling match: one men's match, one women's match, and one tag team match!
Enjoy!
🔔Subscribe To The Show! https://www.youtube.com/@ropesnriffs?sub_confirmation=1
Email me! ropesnriffspodcast@gmail.com
Follow Ropes N Riffs on social media:
🤘Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ropesnriffs
🤘 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ropesnriffs
🤘X: https://www.x.com/ropesnriffs
💰Support the show via PayPal! https://paypal.me/ropesnriffs
📣$10 or more will get you shouted out on the next episode!
📹 I use Riverside.FM to record and edit my shows!
• Sign up today: https://riverside.fm/?utm_campaign=campaign_2&utm_medium=affiliate&utm_source=rewardful&via=john-kiernan
Listen to Ropes N Riffs wherever you listen to podcasts! Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Pandora, iHeartRadio, and more!
🎧Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/3upFt8nCe2ONsS29jtjzA0?si=81198fdfdfe84019
🎧Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/ropes-n-riffs/id1781702913
About The Show:
Do you like wrestling? Do you like music and stories from the road? Join John Kiernan, wrestling entrance theme song composer, and professional musician of over 10 years for stories and interviews with your favorite wrestlers, rock stars, and personalities!
About the Host:
John Kiernan is a wrestling entrance theme song composer with over 150 themes written for wrestlers in various promotions such as NJPW, WWE, ROH, MLW, and many more. As a professional musician, a veteran in the podcasting space, an avid pro wrestling fan and wrestling personality by way of creating the soundtracks for your favorite wrestlers, John Kiernan forges his latest podcasting venture into diving into stories of music, stories from the road, and wrestling from all walks of life from your (and his) favorites of all time.
Are you looking for a custom wrestling entrance theme or walk out music?
Contact via email at johnkiernanmusic@gmail.com. Or fill out this form here! https://johnkiernanmusic.com/custom-wrestler-entrance-themes/#contact
Take a listen to my themes!
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLIkQOXc7x9NFiIHsYDov27nsUJpcIYJ49
Social media:
• Facebook: www.facebook.com/johnkiernanmusic
• Instagram: www.instagram.com/johnkiernanmusic
• Twiter: www.twitter.com/jkiernanguitar
• Website: www.johnkiernanmusic.com
Nancy and Kitty today joining us from the X-Bombers.
2
00:00:14,073 --> 00:00:15,466
How y'all doing today?
3
00:00:15,634 --> 00:00:16,574
Great to be here, John.
4
00:00:16,574 --> 00:00:17,334
Amazing.
5
00:00:17,334 --> 00:00:20,574
Yeah, the only thing is that people don't know this is morning.
6
00:00:20,814 --> 00:00:21,214
Oh, yeah.
7
00:00:21,214 --> 00:00:22,814
And we don't do morning so well.
8
00:00:22,814 --> 00:00:25,154
Only for you am I going to get up before noon.
9
00:00:25,154 --> 00:00:26,554
That's what I'm saying.
10
00:00:28,154 --> 00:00:30,734
Well, that's legitimate.
11
00:00:30,867 --> 00:00:37,841
And we were talking before we jumped on the air about just everything that you guys have
done, all the different pieces you've done, which we're gonna talk about.
12
00:00:37,841 --> 00:00:49,838
But first and foremost, for everyone watching and for everybody listening, go check out
X-Bombers everywhere you can check out any videos of theirs, because their video, my God,
13
00:00:49,838 --> 00:00:51,085
the way they shoot.
14
00:00:51,085 --> 00:00:59,335
Everything that they have is like crisp pro quality and I just want to say as like
independent to independent You guys are doing that the way it's got to be done So I just
15
00:00:59,335 --> 00:01:05,101
wanted to applaud you for the excellent videos Everybody because you guys are just
crushing that part
16
00:01:05,247 --> 00:01:06,338
that means a ton.
17
00:01:06,338 --> 00:01:08,329
We put a lot of love into those videos.
18
00:01:08,329 --> 00:01:13,191
Everything from the costuming to the writing to the actual shooting and editing.
19
00:01:13,191 --> 00:01:15,802
I mean, we've shot things on Super 8 film.
20
00:01:15,802 --> 00:01:19,554
We've rented TV studios and brought in professional wrestlers.
21
00:01:19,554 --> 00:01:23,356
We've, I mean, we've ran around the streets of Murfreesboro, Tennessee.
22
00:01:23,356 --> 00:01:29,450
I mean, we've done some wild stuff in them and, you know, like we come from a visual, like
we love visual.
23
00:01:29,450 --> 00:01:30,711
I love music videos.
24
00:01:30,711 --> 00:01:31,661
Like they look awesome.
25
00:01:31,661 --> 00:01:33,563
And our favorite part of pro wrestling used to be
26
00:01:33,563 --> 00:01:36,885
when they would just go somewhere and shoot something.
27
00:01:37,005 --> 00:01:39,687
Like no more like, I'm backstage or whatever.
28
00:01:39,687 --> 00:01:42,658
It's like, nah man, you go somewhere, you shoot something.
29
00:01:42,658 --> 00:01:48,921
Whether it's like a fun video package, edited something together, or you just went
somewhere and filmed it.
30
00:01:48,921 --> 00:01:55,275
Like all those Smokey Mountain, WCW, USWA, I mean like all those things, they would just
go somewhere.
31
00:01:55,275 --> 00:02:02,238
And I think our run and gun style is part MTV, part that, where you're like, let's get
everything we can on frame.
32
00:02:03,001 --> 00:02:05,481
just on screen, all our best on screen.
33
00:02:05,481 --> 00:02:09,501
We just read the book, Make Your Own Damn Movie by Lloyd Kaufman.
34
00:02:09,501 --> 00:02:10,921
I don't if you do trauma.
35
00:02:11,161 --> 00:02:11,893
Yep, I do.
36
00:02:11,893 --> 00:02:12,474
Absolutely.
37
00:02:12,474 --> 00:02:13,968
Toxic Avenger, yes.
38
00:02:13,968 --> 00:02:18,428
And so he's just like, he's like, take every dime you have and put it on screen.
39
00:02:18,428 --> 00:02:26,908
And that's, that's how we do it is like, there's a lot of a lot of lot of hook and crook
that goes into an X Bombers music video to make that happen.
40
00:02:26,908 --> 00:02:32,328
And thank you for mentioning that it's like professional level like that, because it's, it
is what we're going for.
41
00:02:32,328 --> 00:02:33,588
And we have a background in it.
42
00:02:33,588 --> 00:02:36,436
But to do that stuff is just to
43
00:02:36,436 --> 00:02:40,431
It's just to make it happen and have it on frame there and have it on screen.
44
00:02:40,431 --> 00:02:43,485
And so anybody watching who watches it, please reach out.
45
00:02:43,485 --> 00:02:47,750
Like we love talking videos and that our hearts on those things like it is on our record.
46
00:02:47,750 --> 00:02:48,714
So thank you, John.
47
00:02:48,714 --> 00:02:49,424
Absolutely.
48
00:02:49,424 --> 00:02:52,265
like even look at, keep trying to fix bad with worse.
49
00:02:52,265 --> 00:02:57,076
Like to me, I saw like the other stuff, which we'll talk about, obviously the themes, the
Jim Carnet stuff.
50
00:02:57,076 --> 00:02:58,227
And I'm like, those are great.
51
00:02:58,227 --> 00:03:01,938
But then being able to see like what you guys are able to do from that capacity too.
52
00:03:01,938 --> 00:03:04,898
It's like, man, you're creating a story.
53
00:03:04,898 --> 00:03:06,409
And I think people appreciate that too.
54
00:03:06,409 --> 00:03:11,621
People appreciate like, Hey, this band's going out of their way to just make an awesome
video, a fun video.
55
00:03:11,621 --> 00:03:14,302
And you hear it all the time with creatives too, right?
56
00:03:14,302 --> 00:03:16,074
There are so many creatives that
57
00:03:16,074 --> 00:03:21,570
have made it onto large screens, onto movies, just as far as the eye can see.
58
00:03:21,570 --> 00:03:24,673
And you hear them saying, I just started off not knowing what I'm doing.
59
00:03:24,673 --> 00:03:26,955
And then we just did what we thought was right.
60
00:03:26,955 --> 00:03:28,767
And all of a sudden, here's this.
61
00:03:28,767 --> 00:03:39,187
And it's just like, it adds such a human feel, such a dynamic feel, and also such a feel
to who you guys are as performers and as artists, which at the end of the day, that's what
62
00:03:39,187 --> 00:03:40,184
we all are.
63
00:03:40,184 --> 00:03:42,045
Yeah, thanks again.
64
00:03:42,045 --> 00:03:43,186
That's awesome.
65
00:03:43,186 --> 00:03:54,691
So that that particular song which was a wild sort of shoot Yeah, the thing is music
videos can cost a ton of money if you let them but you know what's free is Creativity and
66
00:03:54,691 --> 00:04:04,976
your friends and and story like we're saying narrative is free narrative is free Yeah, you
know narrative is causal one thing leads to another somebody wants something something
67
00:04:04,976 --> 00:04:09,039
gets in the way of them getting that thing Chaos ensues action heats up
68
00:04:09,039 --> 00:04:13,481
And so that video is wild because A, it's an uninterrupted A block.
69
00:04:13,481 --> 00:04:17,084
If you notice, the performance and the story are all in one.
70
00:04:17,084 --> 00:04:20,505
So we don't have hides and stuff, like it's got to move forward.
71
00:04:20,505 --> 00:04:26,948
Two, if you watch it, that is legitimately shot in the back of a 1999 Plymouth Voyager
minivan.
72
00:04:26,948 --> 00:04:29,170
And when we're about to be done, Kitty, what happened?
73
00:04:29,170 --> 00:04:30,651
It caught on fire.
74
00:04:30,651 --> 00:04:31,755
Are you serious?
75
00:04:31,755 --> 00:04:32,366
on fire.
76
00:04:32,366 --> 00:04:34,368
Yes, we were almost done shooting.
77
00:04:34,368 --> 00:04:41,391
And of course, like the engine overheated and smoke was coming out and we were like, just
keep driving, just go, let's finish this.
78
00:04:41,391 --> 00:04:43,509
It was idle, I couldn't get over like 15.
79
00:04:43,509 --> 00:04:45,003
I'm just like, I'm like, we need these.
80
00:04:45,003 --> 00:04:48,241
And so was by the time everybody was kind of out of it.
81
00:04:48,241 --> 00:04:55,022
But yeah, mean, because it's wild, because you don't know where it's going to go and why,
and it has a satisfying conclusion to it.
82
00:04:55,022 --> 00:04:56,213
I mean, that's the thing, too.
83
00:04:56,213 --> 00:04:58,245
Like, we like to punctuate our narratives.
84
00:04:58,245 --> 00:05:02,081
They end at the end, but maybe it asks a new question or something going on.
85
00:05:02,081 --> 00:05:06,143
I think there's a lot of like look at the camera and like shrug leaving things open.
86
00:05:06,143 --> 00:05:17,998
I think we're in this weird post post postmodern storytelling world where things like
causality and what people want and you know logical coherence of a storyline are just out
87
00:05:17,998 --> 00:05:25,369
the window so you know if we can do so in the back of a 99 Plymouth Voyager that's on a
little bit of fire you know we're contributing to the right thing.
88
00:05:25,369 --> 00:05:32,700
That's crazy though too when you think about it because if you're talking about like the
creation of a video like that, you know, you guys have this story, you have everything
89
00:05:32,700 --> 00:05:33,732
that you're putting into it.
90
00:05:33,732 --> 00:05:39,864
You have your fans who are supporting you with like you see at the end of the video, you
have the people come out and it's, all real cool.
91
00:05:39,864 --> 00:05:41,765
And then obviously the car lights on fire.
92
00:05:41,765 --> 00:05:46,647
Like that's, you know, obviously we're going to say that isn't part of it, but it is part
of it.
93
00:05:46,647 --> 00:05:47,437
Like it's
94
00:05:47,437 --> 00:05:50,638
It's now all part of like the whole story of the video.
95
00:05:50,638 --> 00:05:56,081
And now whenever you talk about this song, you're like, yeah, at the end, we basically
one-shotted it, did all this stuff.
96
00:05:56,081 --> 00:05:58,382
And then at the end, the car lit on fire.
97
00:05:58,382 --> 00:05:59,883
So you're just like, we totally planned that.
98
00:05:59,883 --> 00:06:00,723
Absolutely.
99
00:06:00,723 --> 00:06:06,306
But it's like that kind of spontaneity, which I guess fire is, yeah, fire spontaneity.
100
00:06:06,306 --> 00:06:06,616
Yeah.
101
00:06:06,616 --> 00:06:14,009
When you're talking about those things, it's like, it adds so much more to like kind of
the ethos of everything and years down the line and like even days down the line.
102
00:06:14,009 --> 00:06:16,270
People are just like, man, what went into that?
103
00:06:16,270 --> 00:06:18,350
And then they see the final product.
104
00:06:18,350 --> 00:06:19,751
They see what you guys are putting out.
105
00:06:19,751 --> 00:06:21,761
it's just, the song itself is a banger too.
106
00:06:21,761 --> 00:06:29,023
And that's one thing about you guys, which I really admire too, is the sound that you
bring on all the songs that I've picked up from you guys.
107
00:06:29,023 --> 00:06:36,985
Because as someone that writes entrance themes, as someone who is a child of like more
what I would call like the modern metal, like death metal and you know, all those things
108
00:06:36,985 --> 00:06:42,740
and going to jazz and all this, and then being a composer, it's like, you know, for me,
whenever I hear somebody that has
109
00:06:42,740 --> 00:06:45,992
what I would say is like that real authentic rock and roll style.
110
00:06:45,992 --> 00:06:48,523
To me, it's something that I always really appreciate.
111
00:06:48,523 --> 00:06:50,693
And it's always something that you could tell is real.
112
00:06:50,693 --> 00:06:54,476
It's something you could tell comes from the heart, no matter what you're doing, no matter
what the lyrics are.
113
00:06:54,476 --> 00:07:02,119
And, you know, I think that's with the X Bombers, you really feel that whether it's on
themes, whether it's a Jim Cornett song, whether it's on this one or throughout the
114
00:07:02,119 --> 00:07:02,609
catalog.
115
00:07:02,609 --> 00:07:05,020
And I mean, you guys have been doing this since 2010.
116
00:07:05,020 --> 00:07:08,880
So you've had time to really refine that sound to
117
00:07:08,880 --> 00:07:13,013
have the ability to be like, this is the vibe that we're going for.
118
00:07:13,033 --> 00:07:20,680
And the fact that you guys record everything analog, you know, you can record analog over
here on the other side of the screen here.
119
00:07:20,680 --> 00:07:23,743
But for a lot of the work that I do, everything has been digital.
120
00:07:23,743 --> 00:07:29,499
I don't know if that's pulling the wool back too far to my listeners and viewers here,
but...
121
00:07:29,499 --> 00:07:33,061
You know, that is a lot of the times what you see, especially with us entrance theme
composers.
122
00:07:33,061 --> 00:07:36,162
You plug in, sometimes someone's like, hey, we got a show at six.
123
00:07:36,162 --> 00:07:38,641
Can you record this at five and send it over at five 30?
124
00:07:38,641 --> 00:07:39,654
And you're like, what are we doing here?
125
00:07:39,654 --> 00:07:40,385
It's crazy.
126
00:07:40,385 --> 00:07:42,126
Yeah, it, it happens.
127
00:07:42,126 --> 00:07:49,930
But like, you know, the fact that you, you do hear the difference a lot of the times
between recording analog, even then bringing it to digital and just kind of going right
128
00:07:49,930 --> 00:07:50,140
in.
129
00:07:50,140 --> 00:07:54,343
And, you know, I feel like that really comes through on the recordings that you guys do.
130
00:07:54,751 --> 00:07:55,572
Thank you.
131
00:07:55,572 --> 00:08:04,197
So one of the things that's maybe different than us and other people who write is that
we're a working band and that's why we do 70 to 80 live dates a year.
132
00:08:04,197 --> 00:08:06,875
We envy Ric Flair being the 60 minute man.
133
00:08:06,875 --> 00:08:09,379
I mean, we do a lot of three hour shows.
134
00:08:09,440 --> 00:08:18,585
So like we got good at playing in front of people, knowing what works, seeing like the
physical solicitations of like things where you play something, you can see if it's
135
00:08:18,585 --> 00:08:19,927
working or if it's not.
136
00:08:19,927 --> 00:08:22,428
So like a lot of what you hear like gets worked out.
137
00:08:22,428 --> 00:08:26,608
out in front of an audience and you figure it out over dates.
138
00:08:26,608 --> 00:08:29,859
And if you're a live band, that's just kind of where we come from.
139
00:08:29,859 --> 00:08:33,779
We can do studio, but I think we excel at live.
140
00:08:33,941 --> 00:08:34,221
Right?
141
00:08:34,221 --> 00:08:36,262
Like we just have that energy to it.
142
00:08:36,262 --> 00:08:38,934
I think our studio stuff is very live.
143
00:08:38,934 --> 00:08:41,195
I mean, we literally don't track separately.
144
00:08:41,195 --> 00:08:42,055
We do it together.
145
00:08:42,055 --> 00:08:42,496
Yeah.
146
00:08:42,496 --> 00:08:45,808
And if we could cut vocals at the same time, I think we would.
147
00:08:45,808 --> 00:08:48,480
just really there's too much bleed when you do that.
148
00:08:48,480 --> 00:08:50,721
Well, she's the drummer and singer, too.
149
00:08:50,721 --> 00:08:53,633
So every drum beat you hear and everything is her playing it.
150
00:08:53,633 --> 00:08:56,555
There's not one overdub or anything in there.
151
00:08:56,555 --> 00:09:00,677
Like that's exactly how it happened in the room that time.
152
00:09:00,831 --> 00:09:02,642
is like eight string bass and drums.
153
00:09:02,642 --> 00:09:04,523
There's nothing else going on on it.
154
00:09:04,523 --> 00:09:06,503
And so that's maybe a piece of it.
155
00:09:06,503 --> 00:09:10,443
so, you know, as musicians, we kind of see, what's the person I'm talking to up to?
156
00:09:10,443 --> 00:09:16,712
I'm like, I'm like, yeah, yeah, you're you're you're an orchestra and I'm a person with
like a Tom, right?
157
00:09:16,712 --> 00:09:25,826
But like that's really cool too because we're writing from as you said a rock and roll
perspective We're writing from 60s bubblegum pop 70s punk rock where it's like these
158
00:09:25,826 --> 00:09:35,759
catchy sorts of rhythmic sorts of things when something hits Something hits and we're
thinking in terms of like percussion movement that sort of thing and you know and then the
159
00:09:35,759 --> 00:09:41,531
main melody of course is going to be like the vocal but the rest of it is like Everybody
else can write melodic.
160
00:09:41,531 --> 00:09:43,211
We end up writing like a bowling ball.
161
00:09:43,211 --> 00:09:45,952
If you listen to our stuff is actually mixed to mono
162
00:09:46,182 --> 00:09:47,533
There's no stereo mix.
163
00:09:47,533 --> 00:09:48,584
It is straight ahead.
164
00:09:48,584 --> 00:09:51,746
You listen to that thing on one speaker, it's just going to hit you.
165
00:09:51,826 --> 00:10:00,948
You know, I think that's the interesting thing is that we're just writing from this unique
perspective and that like that the wrestling world and people and themes in general have
166
00:10:00,948 --> 00:10:04,039
said like, no, you do your thing.
167
00:10:04,360 --> 00:10:06,562
You know, I'm like, I'm like, fantastic.
168
00:10:06,562 --> 00:10:07,343
I like our thing.
169
00:10:07,343 --> 00:10:11,674
But that's the thing too, is you're saying that it's like a foreign concept right now.
170
00:10:11,674 --> 00:10:13,803
It wouldn't have been foreign 30, 40 years ago.
171
00:10:13,803 --> 00:10:17,267
It wouldn't have even been foreign like 25 years ago.
172
00:10:17,267 --> 00:10:25,420
But I think now with the way the music industry goes, where it's kind of like, you got to
start putting out this music and then you have a whole industry that's not even just based
173
00:10:25,420 --> 00:10:29,502
about the art side, but kind of what I call the difference between like art music and work
music.
174
00:10:29,502 --> 00:10:30,663
It's just like, all right, cool.
175
00:10:30,663 --> 00:10:33,854
We have to go ahead and put out the music that has to...
176
00:10:33,854 --> 00:10:40,514
fit this scene, fit whatever it is, you know, and sometimes you can lose a little bit of
the artistry, which I feel you guys don't.
177
00:10:40,514 --> 00:10:42,974
And, you know, that's really a testament to what you guys do.
178
00:10:42,974 --> 00:10:54,054
And the other thing too is when you guys are recording and writing the music the way that
you are, what people hear live is pretty darn close to what you hear on the records too.
179
00:10:54,460 --> 00:10:57,072
I think that's a bit of a lost art now too.
180
00:10:57,072 --> 00:10:58,112
you know, don't get it twisted.
181
00:10:58,112 --> 00:11:02,282
You can go, you can do backing tracks, you can do whatever the case may be for like bigger
productions.
182
00:11:02,282 --> 00:11:06,187
I'm looking at you, people that use 50 piece orchestras and I see six of you on stage.
183
00:11:06,187 --> 00:11:06,917
I know what you do.
184
00:11:06,917 --> 00:11:08,098
I've done it before.
185
00:11:08,098 --> 00:11:14,091
But you know, it's one of these things where like you guys come on stage and you have this
just raucous sound.
186
00:11:14,091 --> 00:11:18,544
It's this live sound at people that know you and people that are finding out about you.
187
00:11:18,544 --> 00:11:22,021
If they're listening to the records, they're listening to this song, they're listening
to...
188
00:11:22,021 --> 00:11:30,822
you know the fleet of songs that you guys have put out they're getting that same
experience live and i think that's something i think that's really unique to a lot of the
189
00:11:30,822 --> 00:11:32,283
music nowadays
190
00:11:32,723 --> 00:11:33,164
Thank you!
191
00:11:33,164 --> 00:11:43,197
We actually try to point that out in the live show where we will call attention to the
fact that like, Nance doesn't have any pedals, just plugged directly into an amp, and I
192
00:11:43,197 --> 00:11:45,439
don't even play with toms.
193
00:11:45,880 --> 00:11:49,604
so there's no, you know, there's no trickery anywhere.
194
00:11:49,604 --> 00:11:51,734
I mean, sometimes I wish there was.
195
00:11:51,734 --> 00:11:53,016
real quick, real quick on that.
196
00:11:53,016 --> 00:11:54,727
So how did that come to be?
197
00:11:54,727 --> 00:12:00,142
Because even like for me, I play a decent level of drums and I love drums.
198
00:12:00,142 --> 00:12:00,933
I think they're great.
199
00:12:00,933 --> 00:12:07,699
I'm looking across at an electric kit that I have here and I see one, two, three toms and
I'm going, I don't know how I would function without toms.
200
00:12:07,699 --> 00:12:10,161
So tell me about that decision to go, you know what?
201
00:12:10,161 --> 00:12:13,806
I'm going to go sit behind the kit and take a bunch of these things off.
202
00:12:13,806 --> 00:12:15,568
yeah.
203
00:12:16,111 --> 00:12:17,573
It didn't fit in the car.
204
00:12:18,653 --> 00:12:19,204
me?
205
00:12:19,204 --> 00:12:25,314
you had to move and travel with a giant kit like over and over, I swear you'd cut your
toms too.
206
00:12:25,314 --> 00:12:27,988
You'd be like, no, no, no, no, no, not hauling these everywhere.
207
00:12:27,988 --> 00:12:28,908
I'm not doing it.
208
00:12:28,908 --> 00:12:32,070
Keep in mind, every show is you move that drum four times.
209
00:12:32,070 --> 00:12:32,550
Yeah.
210
00:12:32,550 --> 00:12:40,414
From your space to the vehicle, from the vehicle to the venue, from the venue to the
vehicle, from the vehicle back to the space.
211
00:12:40,414 --> 00:12:44,486
So I'm lazy and I don't want to move those toms every single day.
212
00:12:44,486 --> 00:12:46,147
I remember the earliest days of this band.
213
00:12:46,147 --> 00:12:52,341
You looked at a bunch of other people with big kits and you're just like, I would like to
just pare this down.
214
00:12:52,341 --> 00:12:54,923
It's also because I was not any good at it.
215
00:12:54,923 --> 00:12:58,535
And I seriously, I looked at those people and I said, I'm never gonna be them.
216
00:12:58,535 --> 00:13:00,327
I'm never gonna be as good as they are.
217
00:13:00,327 --> 00:13:07,601
So I have to do something totally different in order to like be okay with myself and you
know, and be able to do it period.
218
00:13:07,601 --> 00:13:11,456
So that's why really, that's the honest to God reason why.
219
00:13:11,456 --> 00:13:18,333
But you know what, too, I'm giving you a hard time over it now, but when musicians do
things like that, like even we'll talk about the eight string bass here in a second, but
220
00:13:18,333 --> 00:13:22,457
you know, we think of little things like, okay, cool, you don't play with toms.
221
00:13:22,457 --> 00:13:24,459
Now that makes you play a certain way.
222
00:13:24,459 --> 00:13:25,970
Now that helps build your sound.
223
00:13:25,970 --> 00:13:30,284
And so when people see and people hear you, they're like, man, they're only using these
parts of the kit.
224
00:13:30,284 --> 00:13:34,438
And they may not, let's say, think about it if they're not like a musician, but they're
like, okay, cool.
225
00:13:34,438 --> 00:13:36,847
They're like, there's this sound that nobody else has.
226
00:13:36,847 --> 00:13:37,927
And they're like, what makes that?
227
00:13:37,927 --> 00:13:42,147
And when you talk to people on interviews or people see you live and they're like, oh,
there's no Toms here.
228
00:13:42,147 --> 00:13:45,207
You're basically just like, oh yeah, that makes me me.
229
00:13:45,207 --> 00:13:46,927
And that makes me really unique.
230
00:13:46,927 --> 00:13:54,227
I've also played in bands where drummers are bringing out for a show for like 30 people,
like a 15 piece drum set.
231
00:13:54,227 --> 00:13:58,067
And you got five minutes to get that drum set on and five minutes to get that drum set
off.
232
00:13:58,067 --> 00:14:04,567
And then a show that starts at 10 and is supposed to end at 12 ends at three because the
drummers can't get their stuff off quick enough.
233
00:14:04,567 --> 00:14:05,795
We know those stories.
234
00:14:05,795 --> 00:14:06,676
Yeah.
235
00:14:06,776 --> 00:14:12,328
And if they take the cymbals off the stands on stage, that is a punishable effect.
236
00:14:12,328 --> 00:14:13,113
Cardinal sin.
237
00:14:13,113 --> 00:14:14,324
Cardinal sin of playing live.
238
00:14:14,324 --> 00:14:15,334
That's a no-no.
239
00:14:15,334 --> 00:14:21,616
That's one of those things where you just tell the first drummer, you put your drum set
on, and then everybody else uses that drum set.
240
00:14:21,616 --> 00:14:26,387
And then that drummer is going to be like, yeah, how about you bring on a three piece, and
then we'll do that.
241
00:14:26,387 --> 00:14:27,678
That'll be just a three piece.
242
00:14:27,678 --> 00:14:29,079
We don't need these 15 toms.
243
00:14:29,079 --> 00:14:29,619
We're fine.
244
00:14:29,619 --> 00:14:30,141
We're good.
245
00:14:30,141 --> 00:14:31,992
So you mentioned your drum set.
246
00:14:31,992 --> 00:14:34,372
You mentioned how you don't have toms on it.
247
00:14:34,372 --> 00:14:38,483
And then you brought it up before, my friend, about your eight string bass.
248
00:14:38,483 --> 00:14:39,535
I write.
249
00:14:39,535 --> 00:14:42,246
Now I play six string and seven string guitars.
250
00:14:42,246 --> 00:14:44,909
I like eight strings because it's laid out in a certain way.
251
00:14:44,909 --> 00:14:46,999
But even students are like, should I do an eight string?
252
00:14:46,999 --> 00:14:48,070
I'm like, I don't know.
253
00:14:48,070 --> 00:14:50,652
Eight strings are crazy, but with an eight string bass, it's doubled.
254
00:14:50,652 --> 00:14:52,052
Like each string is doubled.
255
00:14:52,052 --> 00:14:53,213
So definitely go ahead.
256
00:14:53,213 --> 00:14:55,586
I'd love for you to show us that if you have that around.
257
00:14:55,586 --> 00:15:01,366
Oh yeah, so here's the thing, on ropes and riffs, so we're gonna talk music, we're gonna
talk wrestling.
258
00:15:01,566 --> 00:15:10,046
So I brought it, so it's a Hakestrom A-string bass, so if you can see on top, it's octave,
like it's 12-string guitar, but it's still E-A-D-G, right?
259
00:15:10,046 --> 00:15:11,286
it's, know.
260
00:15:12,246 --> 00:15:22,997
So it's still riffing, but the thing is, you know, if you're playing just, you know, the
root note, you know, versus the chorus of it, you know, you get all the highs and stuff.
261
00:15:22,997 --> 00:15:25,209
You get all the highs and it's like for riffing.
262
00:15:25,209 --> 00:15:34,309
So like when she started not playing with Toms, I don't think it was like a conscious
decision, but every other two piece in the world is guitar and drums.
263
00:15:34,309 --> 00:15:36,481
Like they go, guitar and drums, guitar and drums.
264
00:15:36,481 --> 00:15:38,393
And we tried that for one practice.
265
00:15:38,393 --> 00:15:40,755
And I was like, I hate this, I can't riff.
266
00:15:40,755 --> 00:15:47,237
Because you know, you can't play a guitar alone, because we always say that music needs
ass.
267
00:15:47,479 --> 00:15:57,732
Ass is this thing that makes you move and it makes you feel rooted to the ground and if
you're riffing on bass You know, I mean I think you know we talk influence like how can
268
00:15:57,732 --> 00:15:59,492
you not talk about geezer Butler?
269
00:15:59,492 --> 00:16:09,785
Right like geezer Butler has ass when it comes to a bass line It's just he digs in and the
geezer is the guy who taught us all to anchor with our pinky when we're playing right?
270
00:16:09,785 --> 00:16:16,729
You know, you start off you anchor with your index finger you anchor with your pinky, you
know, you can get that like, you know
271
00:16:17,248 --> 00:16:19,181
and then all of a sudden you're off and rolling.
272
00:16:19,181 --> 00:16:26,991
But that was the case is that I didn't like the lack of lows and then I didn't want to use
a whole lot of pedals.
273
00:16:26,991 --> 00:16:28,053
It doesn't sound right.
274
00:16:28,053 --> 00:16:33,740
And then my uncle actually told me, was like, know, because I came from playing 12 string
guitar.
275
00:16:34,301 --> 00:16:36,431
And so he was like, you know, they made an eight string bass.
276
00:16:36,431 --> 00:16:37,842
I'm like, shut up.
277
00:16:38,629 --> 00:16:45,634
So, you know, I had a pile of other stuff that I had to go and sell to figure out how to
get one, because they only made a couple hundred of these in the 60s.
278
00:16:45,634 --> 00:16:52,347
And they're not a popular instrument because they are terrible if you're in a full band,
because they just take up way too much space.
279
00:16:52,347 --> 00:16:53,718
They take up the trouble.
280
00:16:53,718 --> 00:16:56,860
They don't really do like bass well either.
281
00:16:56,860 --> 00:17:02,495
It's not like you want that like pounding Thunderbird or P bass or guilt B through a one
or something.
282
00:17:02,495 --> 00:17:10,351
It like takes up its own weird space that's like a little bit higher on the bass and a
whole lot of trouble but not as much to be able to hit guitar.
283
00:17:10,351 --> 00:17:20,590
It's a weird instrument and like I think that's the thing is that like that it just became
unique that I started hearing songs that way because you could riff on it you could hear
284
00:17:20,590 --> 00:17:25,174
and you played differently and you end up playing bass and rhythm guitar at the same time.
285
00:17:25,174 --> 00:17:27,716
So if you listen to our songs that's what's going on.
286
00:17:27,810 --> 00:17:33,866
And there's no toms because toms would be competing with about the sonic space of the
8-string bass.
287
00:17:33,866 --> 00:17:35,708
So like we didn't know that at the time.
288
00:17:35,708 --> 00:17:37,255
It was like a happy accident.
289
00:17:37,255 --> 00:17:38,255
Exactly.
290
00:17:38,380 --> 00:17:40,251
But you touched on something there too.
291
00:17:40,251 --> 00:17:49,186
And I think with the eight-string bass too, you kind of get the best of both worlds in a
way, especially if you're somebody who's writing and somebody who, dare I say, is kind of
292
00:17:49,186 --> 00:17:51,527
coming from a bit of a guitaristic mind on it.
293
00:17:51,527 --> 00:17:59,130
But at the same time, you're getting that low end too, because then you're kind of
approaching the instrument in such a way where you're using it to make rhythms, you're
294
00:17:59,130 --> 00:18:01,050
using it to groove, though also like a bass.
295
00:18:01,050 --> 00:18:06,304
So it probably changes a little bit of the way that you play and makes you a little bit
more...
296
00:18:06,304 --> 00:18:13,837
a little bit more composer-esque than you would normally be on guitar, but a little bit
more melodic than you might be on a bass, for example.
297
00:18:13,837 --> 00:18:18,809
And it's interesting that you are using that because you're talking about this
eight-string bass.
298
00:18:18,809 --> 00:18:22,283
There's a band that I love called This Town Needs Guns, TTNG for short.
299
00:18:22,283 --> 00:18:29,516
And when you see them live, I'm pretty sure they're still doing it now, but they use a
bass that's just a six-string guitar tuned down a complete octave.
300
00:18:29,516 --> 00:18:32,858
And I forget what you call that, but it's literally the same thing, right?
301
00:18:32,858 --> 00:18:34,048
It's just a...
302
00:18:34,052 --> 00:18:39,435
a guitar in standard, they call it like, they don't call it a bass guitar, but they call
it something like that.
303
00:18:39,435 --> 00:18:44,940
But like, it's basically a sixth string with the bass, with all bass strings, E-A-D-G-B-E.
304
00:18:44,940 --> 00:18:46,361
And it's really cool.
305
00:18:46,361 --> 00:18:49,312
And for me, it starts to show you like, okay, cool.
306
00:18:49,312 --> 00:18:52,989
Like we're in this time where you don't just have to do guitar, you don't just have to do
bass.
307
00:18:52,989 --> 00:18:54,104
There's all these different ways.
308
00:18:54,104 --> 00:18:59,879
And for you, instead of having to throw like an octave pedal on it then just go all the
way down, you know, you're like, that sounds digital.
309
00:18:59,879 --> 00:19:02,343
We got this and it works for the sound that we're doing.
310
00:19:02,343 --> 00:19:05,148
And again, it gives like that loud, raucous sound.
311
00:19:05,148 --> 00:19:09,275
It can do what you need to, but it really fits the sound that you guys are going for.
312
00:19:09,275 --> 00:19:11,859
And it's cool that it's been like, yeah.
313
00:19:11,932 --> 00:19:13,874
between the octave and the main.
314
00:19:13,874 --> 00:19:16,596
So it creates all these wild overtones.
315
00:19:16,596 --> 00:19:21,558
So like an octave pedal says, you are this, this is the exact equivalent of this.
316
00:19:21,638 --> 00:19:25,330
The way that something shakes and yeah, they interplay and there's harmonics and stuff.
317
00:19:25,330 --> 00:19:33,235
So the analog way of doing something is always the bigger pane, but always the more like
unique, interesting, like intriguing.
318
00:19:33,235 --> 00:19:38,227
I mean, I think when we write songs and we play, our goal is to take you on a trip
319
00:19:38,227 --> 00:19:42,488
somewhere, but also like to make it exciting where you're just like, I haven't heard this
before.
320
00:19:42,488 --> 00:19:43,801
I haven't done this thing before.
321
00:19:43,801 --> 00:19:46,747
So, you know, that kind of leads to that as well.
322
00:19:46,957 --> 00:19:50,930
And talking about exciting stuff, you guys have a theme that you did.
323
00:19:50,930 --> 00:19:52,163
I'm sorry.
324
00:19:52,163 --> 00:19:53,204
Talking about exciting.
325
00:19:53,204 --> 00:20:00,671
You guys have a theme that you did for Jeremiah Plunkett in NWA, which is as the name
implies a wicked bad song.
326
00:20:00,671 --> 00:20:07,267
just named, I just used the bad from the title of it, but you guys know, talk to us a
little bit about that theme.
327
00:20:07,267 --> 00:20:08,808
Cause that hits hard too.
328
00:20:08,808 --> 00:20:11,969
And again, like we're talking about in the world of entrance themes.
329
00:20:11,969 --> 00:20:17,089
You know, if you look at all the different companies, there's a lot of themes which are
kind of like, okay, they're a theme.
330
00:20:17,089 --> 00:20:18,649
They're a theme that does a thing.
331
00:20:18,649 --> 00:20:26,749
But when we think of really great entrance themes in wrestling, we think about something
that's a bit unique towards the character and really identifies them.
332
00:20:26,749 --> 00:20:30,769
And with Jeremiah Plunkett's theme, definitely think you guys nailed that.
333
00:20:30,769 --> 00:20:33,401
Walk through us a little bit on to how that came to be.
334
00:20:33,871 --> 00:20:39,971
So we met Jeremiah, he was actually one of the people who was in our Get the Experience
music shoot.
335
00:20:39,971 --> 00:20:41,394
So he was one of the dudes in the hood.
336
00:20:41,394 --> 00:20:45,911
And what was cool is that like, we knew who he was before he reached out.
337
00:20:45,911 --> 00:20:48,035
like, I know exactly who you are.
338
00:20:48,035 --> 00:20:53,150
And so I mean I would say that over the course of working with them We kind of got to
become friends too.
339
00:20:53,150 --> 00:21:02,348
So we kind of got to know him a little bit So we're inspired by by people like we meet
somebody and we kind of get to know him We're like, okay I kind of see who you are and
340
00:21:02,348 --> 00:21:09,080
Jeremiah Plunkett is the nicest guy in the world who I would not ever ever want to mess
with
341
00:21:09,080 --> 00:21:10,861
That's how it is with all wrestlers, by the way.
342
00:21:10,861 --> 00:21:13,083
I've said this on multiple shows, I've said this for years.
343
00:21:13,083 --> 00:21:18,146
I'm like, dude, some of the nicest people I've worked with in the world on projects are
wrestlers.
344
00:21:18,146 --> 00:21:22,809
And like, there's this one girl I always bring up, girl Masha Slamovich, she's in TNA now.
345
00:21:22,809 --> 00:21:24,750
She's just unbelievable.
346
00:21:24,750 --> 00:21:27,853
And her moveset is just like, she hurts in all of the right ways.
347
00:21:27,853 --> 00:21:33,741
And I always say, I'm like, we came up with this really heavy theme, but talking to her, I
don't mean to burst Masha's bubble.
348
00:21:33,741 --> 00:21:36,894
one of the nicest people in the world, And that's always how it is.
349
00:21:36,894 --> 00:21:38,156
Please, thank you, everything.
350
00:21:38,156 --> 00:21:39,237
my gosh, you're so nice.
351
00:21:39,237 --> 00:21:41,389
And I'm just like, dude, this is so cool.
352
00:21:41,389 --> 00:21:45,398
So it's good to hear that he's also the same way on the other side of the camera.
353
00:21:45,398 --> 00:21:52,133
Pro wrestlers will go to the end of the earth for you like Kitty how many you know how
badly did you hit them with like stuff that day?
354
00:21:52,133 --> 00:21:55,539
Well, you know you're doing a million takes or something
355
00:21:55,744 --> 00:21:57,045
And that was a one take.
356
00:21:57,045 --> 00:21:59,097
So we had to do the whole thing over and over.
357
00:21:59,097 --> 00:22:06,331
yeah, but they, mean, everybody was so professional and accommodating and just really
worked with us.
358
00:22:06,331 --> 00:22:10,915
our whole thing was like, we're just like, man, this is is a legitimate concrete floor.
359
00:22:10,915 --> 00:22:11,796
Don't fall on it.
360
00:22:11,796 --> 00:22:13,958
And they're like, we know no other way.
361
00:22:13,958 --> 00:22:17,310
And that's the thing, actually, that this is this is my like pet peeve.
362
00:22:17,310 --> 00:22:21,575
It's a pure wrestling pet peeve is that like when places don't like
363
00:22:21,575 --> 00:22:25,861
Like these people give their bodies entirely on these things.
364
00:22:25,861 --> 00:22:32,715
I mean, the way that they go and the way that wrestlers who love that craft are willing to
walk through a wall for you.
365
00:22:32,775 --> 00:22:42,100
Our thought is always you just have to like put them in the most, the best position for
success and to look their best and the safest sort of thing that gets the most out of
366
00:22:42,100 --> 00:22:42,550
something.
367
00:22:42,550 --> 00:22:51,516
And so with Jeremiah, was like a long-term sort of thing where we did that and we talked
and he helped like promote the video and he wore like one of our shirts at like a bull
368
00:22:51,516 --> 00:22:52,676
rope match he was doing.
369
00:22:52,676 --> 00:22:54,219
I mean, like it was like a long-term sort
370
00:22:54,219 --> 00:22:54,720
of thing.
371
00:22:54,720 --> 00:23:00,527
And you know, he brought up something we do an annual award show called the Bommie Awards,
recognizing excellence in excellence.
372
00:23:00,527 --> 00:23:07,293
And so he mentioned something about doing a theme and I was like, I was like, I got an
idea that I've kind been working on for it.
373
00:23:07,293 --> 00:23:18,781
And so, you know, we went from probably our last record, New Love is Easy, from this like
more kind of psychedelic jazz background to just one day we put on a few years ago, it was
374
00:23:18,781 --> 00:23:19,824
a
375
00:23:19,824 --> 00:23:22,906
like bad classic rock record comp.
376
00:23:22,906 --> 00:23:29,924
And it was like foreigner and foghead and all and like we had this guttural feeling to it,
right?
377
00:23:29,924 --> 00:23:31,912
Yeah, you see you just said bad.
378
00:23:31,912 --> 00:23:32,723
It's not bad.
379
00:23:32,723 --> 00:23:34,414
It's amazing.
380
00:23:34,414 --> 00:23:38,777
It just has all the best like kind of classic rock and we just I don't know.
381
00:23:38,777 --> 00:23:41,819
It's something in our little brains broke and we were like this.
382
00:23:41,819 --> 00:23:43,370
This is what we want to do.
383
00:23:43,370 --> 00:23:45,271
We want to make this kind of music.
384
00:23:45,271 --> 00:23:46,022
feeling.
385
00:23:46,022 --> 00:23:46,552
Yeah.
386
00:23:46,552 --> 00:23:48,844
You know, and if you we grew up at WCW house.
387
00:23:48,844 --> 00:23:51,244
We were both in WCW House.
388
00:23:51,244 --> 00:23:53,504
We loved world championship wrestling.
389
00:23:53,784 --> 00:24:00,044
When WCW went away in late 1999 and you're like, went out of business in 2001.
390
00:24:00,044 --> 00:24:03,944
I'm like, no, my WCW left in October 1999.
391
00:24:04,744 --> 00:24:10,884
But all those themes, all those Jimmy Hart themes, the idea that an angle could get over
because of music.
392
00:24:10,944 --> 00:24:11,944
Three count.
393
00:24:11,944 --> 00:24:13,364
How brilliant is that?
394
00:24:13,364 --> 00:24:14,784
Everyone hated boy bands.
395
00:24:14,784 --> 00:24:16,864
They go out there and they dance.
396
00:24:16,984 --> 00:24:18,624
Disco Inferno.
397
00:24:18,764 --> 00:24:25,308
Glenn Gilberti is a talented wrestler, but he never would have gotten over like that if
everybody didn't hear Disco Fever, yeah, yeah, yeah.
398
00:24:25,308 --> 00:24:29,764
And like, Surfer Sting, a man called Sting, there's, you know, he comes out.
399
00:24:29,764 --> 00:24:30,430
You kidding me?
400
00:24:30,430 --> 00:24:32,207
I still sing that one, I love that one.
401
00:24:32,207 --> 00:24:34,012
I think you've heard of that.
402
00:24:36,654 --> 00:24:37,261
No, yeah.
403
00:24:37,261 --> 00:24:38,694
it's on repeat, ladies and gentlemen.
404
00:24:38,694 --> 00:24:40,295
m
405
00:24:40,295 --> 00:24:42,537
back to the back to he's a bad, bad man.
406
00:24:42,537 --> 00:24:53,053
That was the thing is that we wanted something that was just like this like piece of
classic rock, something, you know, something that like Judas Priest or the Scorpions or
407
00:24:53,053 --> 00:24:54,334
Brownsville Station would be doing.
408
00:24:54,334 --> 00:25:02,229
We're like in that mindset these days, but we wanted it to be this thing that like is
exciting to hear in person too.
409
00:25:02,229 --> 00:25:07,191
So when he comes out, you want it that speed where he kind of walks out that way, you
know,
410
00:25:07,191 --> 00:25:17,131
And Jeremiah, like legitimately, like I ran into him on one take of the experience video,
like, because I, you know, if you watch it, you should, it's 96 seconds.
411
00:25:17,131 --> 00:25:18,271
It's wonderful.
412
00:25:18,271 --> 00:25:23,091
I have to smear him with this eight string guitar, with his eight string bass.
413
00:25:23,091 --> 00:25:26,391
And on one take, I took a step too far.
414
00:25:26,391 --> 00:25:31,091
And it's like, I ran into a cement wall, a hundred year old oak tree.
415
00:25:31,091 --> 00:25:33,131
And like, it was all my fault.
416
00:25:33,131 --> 00:25:34,851
It's like, he felt so bad.
417
00:25:34,851 --> 00:25:37,111
I'm just like, you feel bad for not moving.
418
00:25:37,111 --> 00:25:47,833
um And so, you know just to kind of get that like where it's in his mind and I think that
was the other thing too is that like We wanted to give him a gift anybody we write a theme
419
00:25:47,833 --> 00:25:54,287
song for we want to give them a gift and Like we wanted to say like no we see you this way
420
00:25:54,657 --> 00:25:58,648
Like you are this thing, you know, cause people are like, it's plunky.
421
00:25:58,648 --> 00:26:01,471
And in my head, I'm like, people should be calling a Mr.
422
00:26:01,471 --> 00:26:02,572
Plunket.
423
00:26:03,272 --> 00:26:10,846
Only like, cause he's like, you know, like he's the Arne Anderson of our day is he just
goes ahead and he's a beast.
424
00:26:10,846 --> 00:26:19,060
he just, you know, we just want it to be where it's just everybody else has like these
kind of like other themes that are like that, but we want to slow burn.
425
00:26:19,060 --> 00:26:21,431
But then we ended up putting the hook in the beginning of it.
426
00:26:21,431 --> 00:26:22,761
We're like, let's start it with the chorus.
427
00:26:22,761 --> 00:26:24,302
Let's, let's jumpstart it and start.
428
00:26:24,302 --> 00:26:33,808
Hotsy you know what's going on and then the story that we wanted to tell was all these
sorts of situations and you know us we're not we're not a trusting pair so any song that
429
00:26:33,808 --> 00:26:42,584
we write we want to be able to record live we want to be able to play it live at shows
tell people about it every theme song that we've done is part of our lives that we tell
430
00:26:42,584 --> 00:26:52,001
everybody who's there who this person is we always make a joke it's like we're in you know
we're in Darien Illinois tonight go ahead and follow at plunkitis so you confuse him you
431
00:26:52,001 --> 00:26:54,434
know and so we you know our friends
432
00:26:54,434 --> 00:27:03,052
our friends for a long time but also like we didn't we wanted to do a song that we loved
so we didn't necessarily totally trust that he would use it
433
00:27:03,052 --> 00:27:15,488
Because it's wrestling and so we wanted to write a song that was like kind of two levels
and so lyrically It's like part bad bad Leroy Brown And and and coding by the charlatans.
434
00:27:15,488 --> 00:27:25,723
It's about this like bad influence That's going on that you don't want to mess with in any
kind of way And so we thought that instead of writing about a very specific person We
435
00:27:25,723 --> 00:27:32,846
would use pieces of Jeremiah to kind of inform this holistic sort of thing so then he
would see himself again in
436
00:27:32,846 --> 00:27:33,887
in as well.
437
00:27:33,887 --> 00:27:37,419
But you know, and then there's like little sprinklings of like wrestling things in there.
438
00:27:37,419 --> 00:27:39,721
Like if he shoots, he doesn't miss, right?
439
00:27:39,721 --> 00:27:43,443
So like if you know, don't mess with him in the ring or else, you know what I mean?
440
00:27:43,443 --> 00:27:46,415
You're going to wind up on the bad side of a hold, right?
441
00:27:46,415 --> 00:27:48,476
And then, you know, his sugar hold is never sweet.
442
00:27:48,476 --> 00:27:50,768
So it sounds like drugs, which it partially could be.
443
00:27:50,768 --> 00:27:53,741
But sugar hold, of course, is made famous by Bob Roupe.
444
00:27:53,741 --> 00:27:56,453
And then, you know, he would use it in some of his matches.
445
00:27:56,453 --> 00:28:02,207
So like it's these two layer sorts of things, because we think if you write a theme song
that's just all
446
00:28:02,207 --> 00:28:07,141
about like wrestling like he's gonna slam me through this table and do this and that it's
like
447
00:28:07,141 --> 00:28:08,462
Well, then you get Piledriver.
448
00:28:08,462 --> 00:28:10,704
That's basically what you get at that point.
449
00:28:12,886 --> 00:28:16,310
which Piledriver was great, but that was so on the nose.
450
00:28:16,310 --> 00:28:25,490
Like it can't, it's gotta be like, I agree with you on that too, because as I've done a
lot more entrance themes over time, I've kind of gotten to the point where originally I
451
00:28:25,490 --> 00:28:30,474
was like, I'm not a fan of lyrics and songs because it gets in the way of commentary and
things like that.
452
00:28:30,474 --> 00:28:33,258
But over the years I've become like somebody who
453
00:28:33,258 --> 00:28:35,379
really sees the value in the lyrics.
454
00:28:35,379 --> 00:28:39,521
And for me, one of the things I specifically don't do a lot is vocals.
455
00:28:39,521 --> 00:28:46,293
So for me, writing lyrics is always a little bit like, okay, it's a little more
challenging, I think, playing drums or doing guitar or doing the comp side of it.
456
00:28:46,293 --> 00:28:48,314
And I'm just like, okay, so how do I get there?
457
00:28:48,314 --> 00:28:53,975
But there have been a couple of themes I've done recently where I've taken the same exact
approach as you guys did, where it's kind of multipurpose.
458
00:28:53,975 --> 00:28:59,151
Like if you know who the talent is and you're in the wrestling ecosystem,
459
00:28:59,151 --> 00:29:03,873
then it really amplifies that talent that much more and it really connects and resonates
with them.
460
00:29:03,873 --> 00:29:08,545
But if you're not in the wrestling bubble, you can still resonate with that song.
461
00:29:08,545 --> 00:29:13,317
There's a song I just did with a friend of mine, Alex, for a wrestler named Leila Hirsch.
462
00:29:13,317 --> 00:29:17,298
And it tells all legit Leila Hirsch, absolutely.
463
00:29:17,298 --> 00:29:20,030
And she has this amazing story.
464
00:29:20,030 --> 00:29:27,344
But like one of these things I've asked over the years to Jim Johnston was, you you talk
about a wrestler like The Undertaker.
465
00:29:27,344 --> 00:29:28,316
Yeah, you can write
466
00:29:28,316 --> 00:29:32,936
something spooky and creepy and dirgey for someone who is obviously dead.
467
00:29:32,936 --> 00:29:35,736
But what do you do for somebody who's just like a really good wrestler?
468
00:29:35,736 --> 00:29:38,716
And I remember he was saying, he goes, everyone has a story.
469
00:29:38,716 --> 00:29:40,656
And so what is that person's story, right?
470
00:29:40,656 --> 00:29:48,616
You think of Cody Rhodes theme and that theme, if you really know all of his like
backstory and all, you see the things in the theme, you're like, wow, that's layers.
471
00:29:48,616 --> 00:29:51,616
But if you just like the song kingdom, you can like kingdom.
472
00:29:51,616 --> 00:29:57,488
If you listen to Layla Hirsch's theme, it's just the story about proving that you are
473
00:29:57,488 --> 00:30:02,150
the baddest person and proving that no matter what you're overcoming everybody's
expectations.
474
00:30:02,150 --> 00:30:09,643
But if you know Leila Hirsch, you hear all these little tie downs to like, okay, cool,
this is a reference to, you know, where she came from.
475
00:30:09,643 --> 00:30:12,004
This is a reference to how people perceive her.
476
00:30:12,004 --> 00:30:17,707
This is what she's going to do if given the opportunity to throw hands with you, you know,
all those things.
477
00:30:17,707 --> 00:30:24,221
So it's like the fact that you have these beat points about Jeremiah and you're just like,
it can work.
478
00:30:24,221 --> 00:30:27,366
for him and amplify his character and exemplify that.
479
00:30:27,366 --> 00:30:30,611
But also, if you don't know who he is, you can still get something out of this song.
480
00:30:30,611 --> 00:30:32,525
I think that's a real testament to it.
481
00:30:32,525 --> 00:30:37,105
Well, it ended up, that song ended up getting played on 400 different radio stations.
482
00:30:37,105 --> 00:30:41,185
So it hit 48 on the Radio India Alliance charts, which was mind blowing.
483
00:30:41,185 --> 00:30:41,525
Right?
484
00:30:41,525 --> 00:30:45,825
And so like, we always are going to write a song that like does two things.
485
00:30:45,825 --> 00:30:49,625
Like number one, we want to, like it has to stand alone.
486
00:30:49,625 --> 00:30:55,525
Like it's like, that's the thing is it has to be, if you don't care about wrestling one
bit, it's got to stand alone.
487
00:30:55,649 --> 00:31:02,624
And then two, like if we take the challenge of like writing a song and listen, we're an
acquired sort of taste for this thing, right?
488
00:31:02,624 --> 00:31:10,498
Like it's different, it's retro, it's that 60s, 70s, 80s kind of like rock, punk, glam,
glitter, all this sort of stuff rolled in there.
489
00:31:10,498 --> 00:31:14,560
Our goal is like, we're like, it's the Jimmy Hart school of songwriting.
490
00:31:14,560 --> 00:31:16,681
It's like, man, we are gonna get you over.
491
00:31:16,681 --> 00:31:24,044
Like this song, if you can play it enough, like it's gonna, like, and so that's why then
like we're in talks with a few people.
492
00:31:24,044 --> 00:31:25,186
to write things to.
493
00:31:25,186 --> 00:31:34,312
But like until I've got a take and until I'm confident I can play it at our live shows and
by the way I'm gonna get it over at our live show too and then if it does that.
494
00:31:34,312 --> 00:31:37,555
That's how I find out what works and what doesn't you know.
495
00:31:37,555 --> 00:31:38,395
With an audience.
496
00:31:38,395 --> 00:31:49,084
Yeah if I can play it at one of my shows where people have no idea you know who this
person is this wrestler is and I can get people to like it then I know great I can now
497
00:31:49,084 --> 00:31:52,206
give it to this wrestler and say like use it because this is good.
498
00:31:52,206 --> 00:31:56,693
And I should also be able to see the song in my head, like where it would play.
499
00:31:56,693 --> 00:32:02,829
so like when I got a hold of Jeremiah, Jeremiah and I were talking about this, we have the
longest text chain in the world.
500
00:32:02,829 --> 00:32:03,970
I apologize.
501
00:32:03,970 --> 00:32:10,150
We must be friends because anybody else would have killed me by now when we come back with
like 18,000 ideas for him.
502
00:32:10,430 --> 00:32:16,930
like, you know, I was like, I was like, man, this is is this is Jim Crockett 1986.
503
00:32:17,190 --> 00:32:19,710
Like this dude is coming out and seeing this.
504
00:32:19,710 --> 00:32:26,570
But it's also like I can see it in the nastiest parts of a city walking around like we did
with the video for He's a Bad, Bad Man.
505
00:32:26,570 --> 00:32:28,030
And so it's just visual.
506
00:32:28,030 --> 00:32:31,696
So if I can see the moment that like that I'd
507
00:32:31,696 --> 00:32:41,260
seeing it for like a music video and then like how that wrestler would be seeing it or you
know we've written things for like book series like the 24-7 Demon Mart and Gates of
508
00:32:41,260 --> 00:32:50,003
Divinity if I can see that in action where it's like the outcome of what that would be
visually so if I can see our music visually I know we're on to a good track
509
00:32:50,363 --> 00:32:50,993
I love that.
510
00:32:50,993 --> 00:32:55,706
And so you have this song for Jeremiah that he's been crushing it to.
511
00:32:55,706 --> 00:32:56,827
He's in NWA.
512
00:32:56,827 --> 00:32:58,008
You guys are putting it out.
513
00:32:58,008 --> 00:32:59,949
You guys are doing all this stuff for it.
514
00:32:59,949 --> 00:33:06,903
But before that, you guys had something that you did for Jim Cornett, which that song is
awesome.
515
00:33:06,903 --> 00:33:10,395
And that's where, when I was watching like the ending video, we were like, okay, cool.
516
00:33:10,395 --> 00:33:13,577
Here's the omnibus version of him bringing it up on the show.
517
00:33:13,577 --> 00:33:14,577
And then
518
00:33:14,645 --> 00:33:20,250
You basically just like keep telling him that you want it to be the theme and you kept
doing the stuff against the cardboard.
519
00:33:20,250 --> 00:33:21,291
was like, I love that.
520
00:33:21,291 --> 00:33:23,403
So that song is awesome too.
521
00:33:23,403 --> 00:33:26,876
And it's gotten play on Jim Cornett show.
522
00:33:26,876 --> 00:33:29,278
And I just love, I love the vibe of that too.
523
00:33:29,278 --> 00:33:30,638
Again, just very rock and roll.
524
00:33:30,638 --> 00:33:34,223
That one is a lot more, I think in terms of that one, that one's a lot more fun.
525
00:33:34,223 --> 00:33:38,366
That one is a little bit more on the nose, you know, but in intentionally, right?
526
00:33:38,366 --> 00:33:41,019
Like you guys are making that decision to make it more on the nose.
527
00:33:41,019 --> 00:33:41,581
So.
528
00:33:41,581 --> 00:33:49,014
When you're writing that theme, tell us a little bit as to how that comes to be and the
reception from Jim and the fans.
529
00:33:49,073 --> 00:33:55,717
Well, one last thing about Jeremiah before we move on to is that like he's using it in
National Wrestling Alliance, which is amazing.
530
00:33:55,717 --> 00:33:58,268
And that video actually went across Billy Corgan's desk.
531
00:33:58,268 --> 00:34:01,500
And so they talked about actually doing something with it on TV.
532
00:34:01,500 --> 00:34:05,042
But I think it got caught in production hiatus because they're on a weird schedule.
533
00:34:05,042 --> 00:34:05,882
But he started.
534
00:34:05,882 --> 00:34:09,864
So Jeremiah is working as a heel in all these places.
535
00:34:09,864 --> 00:34:13,405
And like despite that, the crowd is singing it at him.
536
00:34:13,405 --> 00:34:14,786
And so I'm like.
537
00:34:14,869 --> 00:34:16,840
That's exactly what you want.
538
00:34:16,960 --> 00:34:19,651
for like, I mean, we were heading back from Wisconsin, right?
539
00:34:19,651 --> 00:34:26,904
So the funny thing about the Jim Cornett theme is that people think that it's like a work.
540
00:34:27,025 --> 00:34:33,519
It's not like people think that we knew Brian last or something and that he just like was
like, you know, do this or whatever.
541
00:34:33,519 --> 00:34:38,371
I'm like, no, no, we legitimately listen to the show.
542
00:34:38,371 --> 00:34:39,011
We drive.
543
00:34:39,011 --> 00:34:41,032
Obviously, we spent a lot of time in the car.
544
00:34:41,032 --> 00:34:41,793
Yeah, that's our show.
545
00:34:41,793 --> 00:34:44,426
And there was an episode where at the very end of the
546
00:34:44,426 --> 00:34:47,486
drive through, they were like, hey, we need a theme song.
547
00:34:47,486 --> 00:34:48,566
We need a new theme song.
548
00:34:48,566 --> 00:34:49,426
This has been going on.
549
00:34:49,426 --> 00:34:51,806
I think Brian was like, this has been going on too long.
550
00:34:51,806 --> 00:34:53,366
Somebody send in like this thing.
551
00:34:53,366 --> 00:34:54,626
And it's two in the morning.
552
00:34:54,626 --> 00:34:58,126
It's two in the morning, you know, and we're tired.
553
00:34:58,126 --> 00:35:01,626
And then I think we just turned to each other and we're like, we're a band.
554
00:35:01,626 --> 00:35:04,546
We can write a theme song for Jim Cornette.
555
00:35:04,546 --> 00:35:05,186
Why not?
556
00:35:05,186 --> 00:35:06,206
Like, let's just try it.
557
00:35:06,206 --> 00:35:06,886
Let's just do it.
558
00:35:06,886 --> 00:35:07,886
And we knew it.
559
00:35:07,886 --> 00:35:10,846
And so like the approach of it is kind of funny.
560
00:35:10,846 --> 00:35:14,490
We had about a three day window between like day
561
00:35:14,490 --> 00:35:24,076
when we can get in a studio and writing it and everything so she's like this isn't gonna
happen with it is it and so my rule is that if I have an engaging opening line to the song
562
00:35:24,076 --> 00:35:25,260
it's gonna happen
563
00:35:25,260 --> 00:35:30,323
And so we're like, like again, it's like if I can hook you right from the beginning.
564
00:35:30,323 --> 00:35:33,104
like the Midnight and the Rock and Roll, right?
565
00:35:33,104 --> 00:35:40,348
And so it's like, if you listen to Jim Cornette at all, you refers to the Midnight Express
as the Midnight and the Rock and Roll Express as the Rock and Roll, but it also kind of
566
00:35:40,348 --> 00:35:43,131
sounds like, Midnight, Rock and Roll, that's interesting.
567
00:35:43,131 --> 00:35:52,095
But it's like, you know, what greater struggle has there been in pro wrestling history
than the dastardly Midnight Express using things like karate illegally?
568
00:35:52,476 --> 00:35:54,549
Right?
569
00:35:54,549 --> 00:35:56,964
You know, versus the rock and roll express.
570
00:35:56,964 --> 00:36:02,755
mean, like, nobody suffers like, you know, nobody suffers like Ricky Morton, right?
571
00:36:02,755 --> 00:36:04,041
So it's just...
572
00:36:04,041 --> 00:36:14,546
back and forth and so you know I think we knew what it could be but then we wanted to
build in all the things we loved about WCW themes and glam rock like there's a whole lot
573
00:36:14,546 --> 00:36:25,544
of like sweet and the queen in there and stuff like that but also it sounds weird but we
wanted to write something we don't believe that Jim is totally done making appearances so
574
00:36:25,544 --> 00:36:33,101
we didn't just want it to be a podcasting we wanted him to be able to come out to it but
we also kind of wanted it to almost have like a
575
00:36:33,101 --> 00:36:34,961
vibe to it.
576
00:36:34,961 --> 00:36:39,361
Like, so when it hits like that, like it's just, mean, the Jim Cornette part's just DCE,
right?
577
00:36:39,361 --> 00:36:44,601
It's like, I mean, there's nothing to it because it just hits that way.
578
00:36:44,601 --> 00:36:47,221
And you know, so it hits, so it physically does it.
579
00:36:47,221 --> 00:36:54,201
So we'll know if somebody watches the show, if we start playing it they turn their head at
a show, you know, they karate punch through the Jim Cornette.
580
00:36:54,201 --> 00:36:56,041
Jim Cornette!
581
00:36:56,797 --> 00:37:01,171
But we wanted it to be like a heroic entrance, like a superhero sort of thing.
582
00:37:01,171 --> 00:37:05,034
So he's up there and everybody like shouts it and is into it.
583
00:37:05,034 --> 00:37:10,078
And the other piece we really wanted too is we wanted to throw, it takes you on a trip,
right?
584
00:37:10,078 --> 00:37:18,888
Like it's an 83 second song with like low verse chorus, high verse go chorus.
585
00:37:19,208 --> 00:37:29,565
bridge breakdown coda out right like and so like it's a lot in a little but you don't
recognize what's going on because it takes you for that trip you know and i think that was
586
00:37:29,565 --> 00:37:40,085
like a big thing about it too and then like also lyrically you know you know so we we have
a couple of hate threads devoted to us on reddit that we took away people's like parody
587
00:37:40,085 --> 00:37:46,528
themes first of all i love that so many people can have such a strong opinion about
588
00:37:47,256 --> 00:37:48,936
like people they've never met.
589
00:37:48,936 --> 00:37:52,156
I'm sure that you know what I mean, because I'm sure people...
590
00:37:52,156 --> 00:37:56,376
Yeah, I was gonna say, I am sure that you have your own haters.
591
00:37:56,376 --> 00:38:03,956
Listen, think the Brian Myers theme is a panger, but there's probably others who are like,
bring back your indie theme from 2008.
592
00:38:04,597 --> 00:38:08,542
And that was Hinder and I'm like, I'm never gonna bash that song but listen to this one.
593
00:38:08,542 --> 00:38:09,703
This one's great.
594
00:38:09,744 --> 00:38:16,494
Yeah, and they're a little bit, and so like, you know, obviously, like everyone knows it's
corny and James, they're super fun songs.
595
00:38:16,494 --> 00:38:17,650
they're super fun parodies.
596
00:38:17,650 --> 00:38:20,472
So was, so was No One Is a Nice Guy.
597
00:38:20,472 --> 00:38:28,638
Well, and also, like, if you think about it too, we wanted to write something, you know,
like, we didn't want to write songs about two things lyrically.
598
00:38:28,638 --> 00:38:31,360
One, we didn't want to use it to bash other people.
599
00:38:31,360 --> 00:38:32,184
No.
600
00:38:32,184 --> 00:38:36,923
All right, like, and then two, we didn't want to talk about all the stuff that he did.
601
00:38:37,626 --> 00:38:41,659
Like we wanted to talk about the reasons why we like Jim Cornette now.
602
00:38:41,659 --> 00:38:43,700
You know, like it's true.
603
00:38:43,700 --> 00:38:46,021
the line in the British, he's never fake or phony.
604
00:38:46,021 --> 00:38:47,842
He never backs down from a fight.
605
00:38:47,842 --> 00:38:51,064
And those are the things like when he's talking about wrestling, he hates, right?
606
00:38:51,064 --> 00:38:53,678
It's like this fake phony sort of thing, right?
607
00:38:53,678 --> 00:38:59,330
watch him on X, watch him going after everybody, however he goes about it, whether it's
wrestling, politics, whatever.
608
00:38:59,330 --> 00:39:02,216
He's himself, no matter what.
609
00:39:02,216 --> 00:39:03,308
You know what you're getting with him.
610
00:39:03,308 --> 00:39:04,626
He's authentic to himself.
611
00:39:04,626 --> 00:39:06,230
And we've worked with people.
612
00:39:06,230 --> 00:39:10,060
Jack Doan was the referee in our music video for that.
613
00:39:10,060 --> 00:39:15,934
So he worked with Jim for years when he was there with managing Bulldog and Yoko and all
sorts of things on Creative.
614
00:39:15,934 --> 00:39:26,170
And the more people we met who have worked with Jim, they're just like, he has the most
respect for these people, for this industry, loyal, and he just wants the best for
615
00:39:26,170 --> 00:39:27,861
everybody that's involved.
616
00:39:27,861 --> 00:39:31,624
And he's opinionated, but his opinions are based in stuff.
617
00:39:31,624 --> 00:39:36,996
And that was the biggest thing is we go around and there'll be somebody who, like, listen,
618
00:39:36,996 --> 00:39:48,564
admit we watch AEW as well because we want it to work so bad again we're at WCW house and
we're just like like Tony Tony fixes please somehow Tony Schiavone has something to do
619
00:39:48,564 --> 00:40:00,974
with it right but like we go around and people are like geez I can't believe you like that
guy or whatever it's like no like like that I mean we put it out on our fan club seven
620
00:40:00,974 --> 00:40:01,955
inch too
621
00:40:02,075 --> 00:40:07,838
And like, just to say what people Brian Last and Jim Cornett are, they both bought it.
622
00:40:07,838 --> 00:40:11,971
They could have asked us for it for free, you know, like we sent it to their house.
623
00:40:11,971 --> 00:40:16,103
Jim bought an extra t-shirt with like an ex-bomber's t-shirt.
624
00:40:16,133 --> 00:40:18,794
I think that just reveals a lot about their character.
625
00:40:18,794 --> 00:40:20,445
They didn't have to do that.
626
00:40:20,645 --> 00:40:28,949
We would have happily given them, you know, And people complain on like threads where
they're like, bring back the old themes and like they don't blink.
627
00:40:28,949 --> 00:40:32,831
I think part of it is that they just genuinely, I mean, they're both music people.
628
00:40:32,831 --> 00:40:33,561
That's the other thing.
629
00:40:33,561 --> 00:40:36,473
You go on the Arcadian Vanguard channel 15 years ago.
630
00:40:36,473 --> 00:40:42,776
Brian Last is like filming bands in New York City and they're all the bands he likes and
he's trying to like book shows of it.
631
00:40:42,776 --> 00:40:46,107
And obviously like Jim, if you watched as he booked in Smokey
632
00:40:46,107 --> 00:40:58,581
Mountain and OVW music was such a huge piece of that for him so like we're not often
looking to do things but we're just like all right we're music people they're music people
633
00:40:58,582 --> 00:41:08,626
you know I think this can work and that's why if somebody is like geez that Jim Kornecke
we're like like like you do not know him like not like we're like friends with them or
634
00:41:08,626 --> 00:41:13,168
whatever but like when you work with somebody on something like that it tells you who they
are
635
00:41:13,168 --> 00:41:22,643
Yeah, and he's always somebody that I've wanted to have on the show because there was one
show that I was listening to of his and I he has thousands of shows so I'm not gonna sit
636
00:41:22,643 --> 00:41:30,488
here and hit you with a timestamp or an episode but I remember that he had said something
and it was around the time about a year that I started getting into doing the entrance
637
00:41:30,488 --> 00:41:41,784
themes and he was just like years ago we used to not even have entrance themes and I was
like that's interesting and then I think he had said that then they started
638
00:41:41,784 --> 00:41:46,765
with not doing like custom entrance themes, but it was like music that people knew.
639
00:41:46,825 --> 00:41:48,596
You know, exactly.
640
00:41:48,596 --> 00:41:48,996
Yeah.
641
00:41:48,996 --> 00:41:50,857
And I was like, that's really interesting too.
642
00:41:50,857 --> 00:41:58,589
And the narrative behind that was, you know, if you were going to give somebody a piece of
music when they came out, number one, you were sold on them immediately.
643
00:41:58,589 --> 00:42:03,170
And just having music told people that you need to care more about this person than the
others.
644
00:42:03,170 --> 00:42:05,401
But then over time they saw how good it was.
645
00:42:05,401 --> 00:42:10,640
And then they were like, well, you know, let's use music that's on the radio because
people know it and they'll associate it with it.
646
00:42:10,640 --> 00:42:14,231
And it was interesting to me because like, you know, I'm 36.
647
00:42:14,231 --> 00:42:20,906
And for me, my first wrestling match that I, that got me into wrestling was Bret and Sean,
Iron Man match, WrestleMania 12.
648
00:42:20,906 --> 00:42:23,137
And so like, that's more of like a timestamp there.
649
00:42:23,137 --> 00:42:23,317
Right.
650
00:42:23,317 --> 00:42:26,299
And it's like, you know, for me, everything else is historic.
651
00:42:26,299 --> 00:42:29,871
I didn't see in real time, Hulk slam Andre.
652
00:42:29,871 --> 00:42:30,531
You know what I mean?
653
00:42:30,531 --> 00:42:32,732
I didn't see the free birds in their time.
654
00:42:32,732 --> 00:42:35,194
I didn't see killer Kowalski obviously in his time.
655
00:42:35,194 --> 00:42:39,007
So for me, it's like learning about how the industry was and like,
656
00:42:39,007 --> 00:42:45,291
Now the industry that we sit in, like you guys, me, we're in this industry where
everything is like a TV production, right?
657
00:42:45,291 --> 00:42:51,506
And like every single character has a theme, even if they're only on like two times a year
or something like that.
658
00:42:51,506 --> 00:42:52,867
Everybody's got to have a theme.
659
00:42:52,867 --> 00:42:54,217
Every show has to have a theme.
660
00:42:54,217 --> 00:42:57,910
Every pay-per-view has to have a theme, whether it's like licensed music or not.
661
00:42:57,910 --> 00:43:01,022
And you're just like, it's so different than how it used to be.
662
00:43:01,022 --> 00:43:07,257
So for me, I'd love to even have him on the show and just be like, look, obviously you're
using the stuff with X-Bombers and it's awesome.
663
00:43:07,257 --> 00:43:08,135
But like,
664
00:43:08,135 --> 00:43:19,869
These are conversations where it's like you've been in the industry so long to where you
know how it was without music to get people over and amplify a character.
665
00:43:19,869 --> 00:43:23,630
I just love to have a conversation on that dynamic in real time.
666
00:43:23,630 --> 00:43:26,362
Cause that's like, that's the other side of the themes, right?
667
00:43:26,362 --> 00:43:36,001
What happens if someone doesn't have one you see, you know, in NWA the early part during
COVID and whatnot, they started to not use the entrance themes again to Mossach Tampa.
668
00:43:36,001 --> 00:43:36,152
ring.
669
00:43:36,152 --> 00:43:36,699
Yeah.
670
00:43:36,699 --> 00:43:41,823
Yeah, Tomaso Ciampa early on when he turned heel in NXT, he just came out to booze.
671
00:43:41,823 --> 00:43:44,405
And I was like, this is the best thing ever.
672
00:43:44,405 --> 00:43:45,986
Don't have him have music.
673
00:43:45,986 --> 00:43:49,028
My thing has always been like the Jericho thing in 2008.
674
00:43:49,028 --> 00:43:52,410
Why would you have merch if I don't want you to like me?
675
00:43:52,410 --> 00:43:53,070
Right.
676
00:43:53,070 --> 00:43:54,901
And it's like, that kind of thing.
677
00:43:54,901 --> 00:44:02,316
And you see like the, when someone doesn't have music or music isn't a factor, it's like,
not only what does music do if you have it.
678
00:44:02,316 --> 00:44:03,399
the absence.
679
00:44:04,146 --> 00:44:04,667
Right.
680
00:44:04,667 --> 00:44:05,158
wrestling?
681
00:44:05,158 --> 00:44:07,990
And so that'd be an interesting conversation to have,
682
00:44:07,990 --> 00:44:08,781
Yeah, that would be that.
683
00:44:08,781 --> 00:44:10,503
That silence that kind of goes with it.
684
00:44:10,503 --> 00:44:18,095
And I think the other thing is at some point with kind of modern music when it comes to
this stuff is they just find a bed, they go with it.
685
00:44:18,095 --> 00:44:19,918
think like it just lack.
686
00:44:19,918 --> 00:44:21,158
There must be.
687
00:44:21,820 --> 00:44:23,446
Wrestling is an art form.
688
00:44:23,446 --> 00:44:33,187
I mean, I always say this and so do you know who was at ringside at WrestleMania one who
always I always cite Mary Tyler Moore one of the greatest producers of television all the
689
00:44:33,187 --> 00:44:33,367
time.
690
00:44:33,367 --> 00:44:34,103
You're Tyler Moore.
691
00:44:34,103 --> 00:44:35,053
What are you doing here?
692
00:44:35,053 --> 00:44:45,179
She's like there is no finer theater than professional wrestling in this world And I'm
just like Mary Tyler Moore has this right when this thing is done Correctly, you know,
693
00:44:45,179 --> 00:44:46,520
that's the case
694
00:44:46,584 --> 00:44:55,842
But I think the thing is that ultimately we're all in this kind of world where if you
watch, let's say, AEW.
695
00:44:56,091 --> 00:44:59,123
Crowds don't know when to cheer or when to boo.
696
00:44:59,123 --> 00:45:01,095
They pop for a spot or whatever.
697
00:45:01,095 --> 00:45:05,918
But you know, watch Jeff Jarrett work a match, they all want to count the 10 punches in
the corner, right?
698
00:45:05,918 --> 00:45:08,380
He outsmarts somebody with an arm drag, they cheer.
699
00:45:08,380 --> 00:45:14,494
I mean, like, I think there's these basic human things that we need to set up and then go
from there.
700
00:45:14,494 --> 00:45:18,156
So like to us, you know, if I'm...
701
00:45:18,156 --> 00:45:27,805
looking to put over somebody as a wrestler, we gotta come up with something that's like
catchy, true to them, where people get excited to hear it in the moment.
702
00:45:27,805 --> 00:45:34,571
And if we're looking to get over like a heel where you actually like them, you need to
make some terrible music for them.
703
00:45:34,812 --> 00:45:39,056
So like in AW, they use a weird bed for Don Callis to come out.
704
00:45:39,056 --> 00:45:42,477
It's dissonant, it's like just a synth being held.
705
00:45:42,477 --> 00:45:45,375
similar to what he had when he was the Jackal like early on, yeah.
706
00:45:45,375 --> 00:45:45,796
right.
707
00:45:45,796 --> 00:45:47,229
Yeah, yeah.
708
00:45:47,229 --> 00:45:50,544
Was he using the Cyrus the virus too in ECW?
709
00:45:50,544 --> 00:45:53,681
I'm gonna guess Paul probably has something to do with everything.
710
00:45:53,681 --> 00:45:55,721
But like yeah, like you just you hate it.
711
00:45:55,721 --> 00:45:56,833
You're like, this is uncomfortable.
712
00:45:56,833 --> 00:46:06,992
It's a brown note get out of here And so it invokes that feeling so like if you had
silence, that's cool if you have like but yeah I think there's just this like layer of
713
00:46:06,992 --> 00:46:16,880
noise and barrage that comes at you and I can't distinguish different themes from each
other whereas if I go back and I watch like WCW I'm all like man called sting.
714
00:46:16,880 --> 00:46:19,016
I'm getting Steiner eyes, right?
715
00:46:19,016 --> 00:46:19,778
It's true.
716
00:46:19,778 --> 00:46:20,519
I love that.
717
00:46:20,519 --> 00:46:21,489
Give me one
718
00:46:21,489 --> 00:46:23,229
to your example, like, right?
719
00:46:23,229 --> 00:46:25,449
Like, I'm just a sexy boy.
720
00:46:25,689 --> 00:46:26,909
Oh my God.
721
00:46:26,909 --> 00:46:27,749
Right?
722
00:46:28,129 --> 00:46:28,469
why?
723
00:46:28,469 --> 00:46:30,469
It tells you everything you need to know.
724
00:46:30,469 --> 00:46:33,840
It just, it just, it just, he's so punchable with that line.
725
00:46:33,840 --> 00:46:37,494
And so Bret Hart, you know, we're Bret Hart people.
726
00:46:37,494 --> 00:46:39,386
We love Hitman, right?
727
00:46:39,386 --> 00:46:43,590
And so like you wanted Bret Hart to mess up the sexy boy just because of that theme.
728
00:46:43,590 --> 00:46:46,723
And he's prancing to it and he's taking off the earrings.
729
00:46:46,723 --> 00:46:49,425
you're just like, yeah, he thinks he's a sexy boy.
730
00:46:49,425 --> 00:46:52,525
Let's see what happens when he runs into the guy from the dungeon, right?
731
00:46:52,338 --> 00:46:57,562
the fact that you bring up Shawn Michaels, I could this is a Shawn Michaels stand podcast
at some point, ladies and gentlemen.
732
00:46:57,562 --> 00:47:01,424
Now we're going to go ahead and shift gears here because we're going to do two questions
at the end.
733
00:47:01,424 --> 00:47:06,040
But we're going to go ahead and play a game here called Music City Rumble, where
734
00:47:06,040 --> 00:47:16,553
I have our guests booking musicians versus musicians, one singles match for men, one
singles match for women, and one tag team match using only musicians in the squared
735
00:47:16,553 --> 00:47:17,244
circle.
736
00:47:17,240 --> 00:47:19,824
You are in charge of the wrestling match.
737
00:47:19,824 --> 00:47:22,560
So you're going to be pitting musician against musician.
738
00:47:22,560 --> 00:47:25,965
you get to choose the participants and who would win those matches.
739
00:47:25,965 --> 00:47:28,813
And so like, not like modern day, right?
740
00:47:28,813 --> 00:47:32,705
So like if I want Billy Joel in there, we don't got modern day Billy Joel.
741
00:47:32,705 --> 00:47:33,407
got like...
742
00:47:33,407 --> 00:47:34,278
do that if you want.
743
00:47:34,278 --> 00:47:41,728
could choose modern, could choose living, you could choose dead, you could do living
versus dead, but I'm assuming a dead guy or a dead woman would be a very easy opponent.
744
00:47:42,335 --> 00:47:45,815
Let's pick, we're gonna go with people in their prime.
745
00:47:45,815 --> 00:47:50,555
So like, so if I say like, this is Jimmy Page, you know, let's go ahead.
746
00:47:50,555 --> 00:47:52,595
mean, Jimmy Page in his prime.
747
00:47:52,675 --> 00:47:53,615
That's what you're saying?
748
00:47:53,615 --> 00:47:53,915
Yeah.
749
00:47:53,915 --> 00:47:54,155
Okay.
750
00:47:54,155 --> 00:47:54,415
All right.
751
00:47:54,415 --> 00:47:55,595
I'm going to start with the singles match.
752
00:47:55,595 --> 00:47:56,655
that okay?
753
00:47:56,815 --> 00:47:57,435
Men's singles?
754
00:47:57,435 --> 00:47:59,175
I don't even know if you heard all the rules.
755
00:47:59,175 --> 00:48:00,795
You didn't let him finish.
756
00:48:00,795 --> 00:48:01,735
there more?
757
00:48:02,495 --> 00:48:03,395
Yeah.
758
00:48:03,415 --> 00:48:05,035
His cadence suggests that.
759
00:48:05,035 --> 00:48:05,855
All right.
760
00:48:05,855 --> 00:48:08,755
So it's the match that we all want to see.
761
00:48:09,235 --> 00:48:11,935
It is, it is the...
762
00:48:11,935 --> 00:48:14,057
toxic twins explode.
763
00:48:14,378 --> 00:48:18,241
It's gonna be Joe Perry versus Steven Tyler.
764
00:48:19,343 --> 00:48:19,944
Right?
765
00:48:19,944 --> 00:48:22,866
The toxic twins explode.
766
00:48:22,887 --> 00:48:30,374
And we do an angle where where Steven Tyler's love is too much for Joe Perry and Joe Perry
turns on him.
767
00:48:30,671 --> 00:48:31,071
Right?
768
00:48:31,071 --> 00:48:34,571
So we've got, we're shooting, we're shooting a vignette in the studio, right?
769
00:48:34,571 --> 00:48:36,091
And they're recording an album.
770
00:48:36,091 --> 00:48:43,871
And at some point, you know, Steven is trying to get a solicited take from him and he's
touching, he's like, why are you always touching me, Tal Rico?
771
00:48:43,871 --> 00:48:45,891
And it's just like, I'm just trying to get this out of there.
772
00:48:45,891 --> 00:48:50,331
And then 10 year thing, boom, Perry takes the guitar.
773
00:48:50,647 --> 00:49:02,044
hits Talerico in it, Talerico gets color, he's on the ground there, Aerosmith is done, and
at insult to injury, Joe decides to record that piece where the tape was rolling as a new
774
00:49:02,044 --> 00:49:06,641
45 that he's handing out at all the shows, listening to Steven Tyler crying.
775
00:49:06,641 --> 00:49:08,979
Wow, I think you've thought about this.
776
00:49:08,979 --> 00:49:14,396
I love this and this is great too because you have the recording of Steven Tyler being
like on the background.
777
00:49:14,396 --> 00:49:18,801
Now the question is who who goes over in this match?
778
00:49:18,923 --> 00:49:26,325
Okay, here's the thing is that man, I think I'm gonna put over Joe Perry this launch is
the Joe Perry project Right.
779
00:49:26,325 --> 00:49:28,537
So here's the thing that's on it too.
780
00:49:28,537 --> 00:49:34,635
Is that like because the thing is you'd have to have Tyler work is like a as like a
chicken
781
00:49:35,058 --> 00:49:36,499
Babyface which is kind of weird.
782
00:49:36,499 --> 00:49:37,830
He'd fight from underneath.
783
00:49:37,830 --> 00:49:41,894
We want him to fight from underneath and do those things, but Perry's got to crush him.
784
00:49:41,894 --> 00:49:42,674
What do you think?
785
00:49:42,674 --> 00:49:43,795
Sure, I'll take it.
786
00:49:43,795 --> 00:49:44,626
Yeah.
787
00:49:44,626 --> 00:49:44,986
think so.
788
00:49:44,986 --> 00:49:49,200
I mean, I'd watch it, And I've got Brad Whitford out there who's on Steven's side.
789
00:49:49,200 --> 00:49:51,182
Ooh, in his corner, okay.
790
00:49:51,182 --> 00:49:54,814
Until the last minute where it looks like he's gonna have the comeback.
791
00:49:54,855 --> 00:49:57,597
Big, big Tom Hamilton reaches in.
792
00:49:57,597 --> 00:49:58,658
One, two, three.
793
00:49:58,658 --> 00:50:02,260
Now Joe Perry has a bass player for the Joe Perry Project.
794
00:50:02,267 --> 00:50:03,941
Taurico's got color again.
795
00:50:03,941 --> 00:50:06,559
uh
796
00:50:06,559 --> 00:50:08,730
is just to give Telerico color.
797
00:50:08,753 --> 00:50:09,254
yeah!
798
00:50:09,254 --> 00:50:10,735
Yeah, it's a...
799
00:50:10,735 --> 00:50:11,776
Wow!
800
00:50:11,776 --> 00:50:13,316
I'm saying that, right?
801
00:50:13,387 --> 00:50:17,498
by the way, we got his daughters at ringside, they're crying!
802
00:50:17,498 --> 00:50:18,199
Sure!
803
00:50:18,199 --> 00:50:19,010
Of course!
804
00:50:19,010 --> 00:50:28,001
Right, right, and then he leaves, and then, and then, you know, and Joe Perry leaves the
ring and plays, off of Get Your Wings, You See Me Cryin'.
805
00:50:28,001 --> 00:50:29,001
my god!
806
00:50:29,804 --> 00:50:30,646
I love that.
807
00:50:30,646 --> 00:50:33,458
And just, yeah, so we built it from here.
808
00:50:33,458 --> 00:50:41,954
And the assumption would be if we had only turned based on this, it would be something
where Stephen had to go and get somebody else involved with it in order to do it.
809
00:50:42,433 --> 00:50:44,818
So now we got our one-on-one women's match
810
00:50:44,818 --> 00:50:46,142
Okay, Women's match.
811
00:50:46,142 --> 00:50:48,507
I don't know who the other participant would be.
812
00:50:48,507 --> 00:50:50,241
I can float one for you after this.
813
00:50:50,241 --> 00:50:50,634
what's yours?
814
00:50:50,634 --> 00:50:51,755
Because maybe it's the same as mine.
815
00:50:51,755 --> 00:50:53,658
I've got it complete with MAC.
816
00:50:53,658 --> 00:50:54,029
that's-
817
00:50:54,029 --> 00:50:55,809
Yeah, yeah, that'd be good.
818
00:50:55,809 --> 00:50:56,300
What do you got?
819
00:50:56,300 --> 00:50:59,404
But I was thinking, Chrissy Hine from The Pretenders Joan Jett.
820
00:50:59,404 --> 00:51:02,527
Because she, it's my understanding, she was very...
821
00:51:02,527 --> 00:51:03,147
Yeah.
822
00:51:03,147 --> 00:51:05,731
Like just, she was like a, she was a lot.
823
00:51:05,731 --> 00:51:07,122
It's my understanding she was a lot.
824
00:51:07,122 --> 00:51:08,974
And she annoyed a lot of other women.
825
00:51:08,974 --> 00:51:10,495
So I don't know who her opponent would be.
826
00:51:10,495 --> 00:51:13,207
Well, here's the thing, if I say Joan Jett, I've got steel versus steel.
827
00:51:13,207 --> 00:51:14,238
You don't want that.
828
00:51:14,238 --> 00:51:14,758
Okay.
829
00:51:14,758 --> 00:51:19,122
So like, we all know that Joe Perry could take Steven Tyler in a fight.
830
00:51:19,122 --> 00:51:20,122
Maybe.
831
00:51:20,383 --> 00:51:21,261
Yes.
832
00:51:21,261 --> 00:51:24,211
I'm saying Chrissy is from Ohio.
833
00:51:24,211 --> 00:51:24,691
Totally.
834
00:51:24,691 --> 00:51:25,772
She is scrappy.
835
00:51:25,772 --> 00:51:30,873
So we can't have a Joan Jett because that's like that's a good fight, but it's not a fight
that you need to see.
836
00:51:30,873 --> 00:51:32,542
So who do you want to see her beat up?
837
00:51:32,542 --> 00:51:35,064
You know, it's like Big Bill versus Talos.
838
00:51:35,064 --> 00:51:35,566
Okay.
839
00:51:35,566 --> 00:51:36,146
Right?
840
00:51:36,146 --> 00:51:37,446
You're like, they're both tall.
841
00:51:37,446 --> 00:51:37,936
It's great.
842
00:51:37,936 --> 00:51:42,007
But then I lose something if I've got that going on on it.
843
00:51:42,007 --> 00:51:46,848
You need like, you need your like, you need a blonde who like is like, yay.
844
00:51:47,091 --> 00:51:47,571
all right.
845
00:51:47,571 --> 00:51:48,171
Okay, go.
846
00:51:48,171 --> 00:51:49,182
I got a surprising.
847
00:51:49,182 --> 00:51:50,523
All right.
848
00:51:50,523 --> 00:51:51,065
man.
849
00:51:51,065 --> 00:51:54,228
Chrissy Hine versus Tony Basil, who did Mickey.
850
00:51:54,228 --> 00:51:55,129
I don't know.
851
00:51:55,129 --> 00:51:59,322
I wouldn't count Tony out because she was like a gymnast or something.
852
00:52:00,243 --> 00:52:01,394
Well, hold on though.
853
00:52:01,394 --> 00:52:07,348
Like, so like with wow logic, which by the way, we are going to fully admit here, we love
women of wrestling.
854
00:52:07,661 --> 00:52:08,042
too,
855
00:52:08,042 --> 00:52:09,163
It's a great show.
856
00:52:09,163 --> 00:52:10,264
Production is amazing.
857
00:52:10,264 --> 00:52:12,006
But here's what I know on this, right?
858
00:52:12,006 --> 00:52:16,290
Tony Basil presents as all American girl cheerleader.
859
00:52:16,290 --> 00:52:19,842
the idea when we think Chrissy Hind is just going to hand it to her.
860
00:52:19,842 --> 00:52:24,406
So we're going to get classic WCW sort of.
861
00:52:24,406 --> 00:52:32,262
So the build in on this kind of thing is that Chrissy Hind has just released something
from The Pretenders like Brass in Pocket.
862
00:52:32,262 --> 00:52:34,327
And what knocks it out of the chart?
863
00:52:34,327 --> 00:52:35,047
Mickey.
864
00:52:35,047 --> 00:52:35,787
Mickey.
865
00:52:35,787 --> 00:52:39,427
She's like, oh God, Mickey knocked this out of the chart.
866
00:52:39,947 --> 00:52:44,347
So, so, so she starts like talking in the press and menacing.
867
00:52:44,347 --> 00:52:51,787
And at some point here, like it ends up being that the pretenders were supposed to have
Tony Basil open for her.
868
00:52:51,787 --> 00:52:52,787
Ooh, okay.
869
00:52:52,787 --> 00:52:56,267
But since Mickey's so hot, we swapped the bill.
870
00:52:56,307 --> 00:52:58,927
Now all of sudden the pretenders are.
871
00:52:58,927 --> 00:53:03,087
And she starts saying stuff on stage, walks backstage.
872
00:53:03,351 --> 00:53:08,531
Chrissy Hind spits in Tony Basil's face right before she says, back there.
873
00:53:08,531 --> 00:53:10,871
She's like, have Mickey wipe it off there.
874
00:53:10,871 --> 00:53:13,651
You do your little cheerleader chants and whatever.
875
00:53:13,811 --> 00:53:15,751
Me and the boys are getting out of here.
876
00:53:15,751 --> 00:53:17,131
Mickey stands up for herself.
877
00:53:17,131 --> 00:53:27,962
She gets the arms at the side and goes like, be like, you can say a lot about me, but you
can't say anything about Mickey in this sort of cheerleading and defending.
878
00:53:27,962 --> 00:53:28,602
Wow.
879
00:53:28,602 --> 00:53:28,962
Right.
880
00:53:28,962 --> 00:53:31,002
And so we've got them in a match at this point.
881
00:53:31,002 --> 00:53:37,362
The only way to settle it, the only way to figure out who opens for who on this tour,
because you got to have something at stake in a match.
882
00:53:37,362 --> 00:53:39,422
If people are just going out there and wrestling, right?
883
00:53:39,422 --> 00:53:42,102
Remember, can Joe break away from Steven?
884
00:53:42,102 --> 00:53:46,122
Now who's going to win on this kind of like thing in order to be up on the card?
885
00:53:46,122 --> 00:53:54,162
And so I've got him in there and we have classic 1980s heels got the advantage runs.
886
00:53:54,616 --> 00:53:55,827
face is outsmarting.
887
00:53:55,827 --> 00:53:59,747
So Tony Basil is doing the splits, cartwheeling out of the way.
888
00:53:59,747 --> 00:54:00,327
I can see it.
889
00:54:00,327 --> 00:54:04,201
It's infuriating until it's all fun and games.
890
00:54:04,201 --> 00:54:12,656
The crowd is laughing until Chrissy hits her with a good right hand and just knocks her
down like a heap, right?
891
00:54:12,656 --> 00:54:19,300
And like a little blood trickling out of the side of the mouth at Tony Basil there
reaching out to the crowd.
892
00:54:19,300 --> 00:54:24,142
Chrissy stomping her saying, this is how we do it in Ohio.
893
00:54:24,406 --> 00:54:35,204
Right, right, she's got eyeliner in her pocket and saying I'm making you punk rock now and
drawing it on her face, write something terrible on her forehead, making her clap like
894
00:54:35,204 --> 00:54:38,356
doing the stomp clap with her hands got her in a hold, right?
895
00:54:38,356 --> 00:54:42,439
The crowd is just so, now we got the comeback coming, right?
896
00:54:42,439 --> 00:54:43,981
The crowd's behind Mickey.
897
00:54:43,981 --> 00:54:47,942
Right, let's go Tony, let's do a chanza, T-O-N-I.
898
00:54:47,942 --> 00:54:48,683
I don't know what it is.
899
00:54:48,683 --> 00:54:51,896
didn't do cheerleading, so I don't know what it is, right?
900
00:54:51,896 --> 00:54:52,437
Right?
901
00:54:52,437 --> 00:54:55,660
Cheering for her, building the sorts of things up, right?
902
00:54:55,660 --> 00:54:59,644
Can't keep her down, can't keep her down, flurry, flurry, flurry.
903
00:54:59,644 --> 00:55:01,866
Our comeback, we put Tony over.
904
00:55:02,627 --> 00:55:04,038
Tony goes over.
905
00:55:04,080 --> 00:55:10,957
I love how well thought out these are too, because this is so like, again, with these,
it's not just who are we doing?
906
00:55:10,957 --> 00:55:13,431
It's also a matter of like their story here.
907
00:55:13,431 --> 00:55:14,171
I love this.
908
00:55:14,171 --> 00:55:17,454
And now you got now you got one tag team too.
909
00:55:18,416 --> 00:55:22,681
This is usually with like the band versus the band, like the full band versus the full
band.
910
00:55:22,681 --> 00:55:23,241
All right.
911
00:55:23,241 --> 00:55:28,125
So I'm gonna say who I like for character work and intrigue.
912
00:55:28,125 --> 00:55:28,575
Okay.
913
00:55:28,575 --> 00:55:33,048
So my one team is gonna be Soft Cell, the band who did Tainted Love.
914
00:55:33,368 --> 00:55:38,431
They are sleazy, they are British, they use machinery, there's something there.
915
00:55:41,054 --> 00:55:43,255
That's not a bug, that's a feature, John.
916
00:55:43,255 --> 00:55:46,487
Yeah.
917
00:55:46,487 --> 00:55:50,220
So, all right, the other side of this though, we would need like a rock and roll band.
918
00:55:50,220 --> 00:55:51,110
Okay.
919
00:55:51,870 --> 00:55:54,262
So like a rock and roll duo, who do you like on this?
920
00:55:54,262 --> 00:55:57,264
I mean the easy one's gonna be like the Black Keys.
921
00:55:59,025 --> 00:56:00,126
Sure, yeah okay.
922
00:56:00,126 --> 00:56:00,696
Okay.
923
00:56:00,696 --> 00:56:01,606
I can see that.
924
00:56:01,606 --> 00:56:04,868
So Dan and my god I can't remember the drummer's name.
925
00:56:05,062 --> 00:56:06,173
Drummer guy.
926
00:56:06,173 --> 00:56:06,943
He's a producer.
927
00:56:06,943 --> 00:56:17,598
He does everything I can't remember so the entire idea here is that we've we've got this
and soft sell is now Releasing all these awesome themes in wrestling.
928
00:56:17,598 --> 00:56:23,210
We're gonna bring it all together here Right all these people and they're starting to get
on TV because of it.
929
00:56:23,210 --> 00:56:29,784
Okay, they're starting to be heard They're starting to be and everything they have all
these vignettes going on on it.
930
00:56:29,784 --> 00:56:34,166
They come out They have machines and so the rock and rollers are just mad.
931
00:56:34,166 --> 00:56:34,716
They're all like
932
00:56:34,716 --> 00:56:36,117
These are instruments, man.
933
00:56:36,117 --> 00:56:41,420
These are instruments and they do it and they come out and they play a set in the middle.
934
00:56:41,420 --> 00:56:44,813
What would it be?
935
00:56:44,813 --> 00:56:52,199
During the Soft Cell Sanitarium, which is their weekly sort of thing where Soft Cell is
having people on with their music and interviewing people too.
936
00:56:52,199 --> 00:56:55,701
So everyone cools on there and kind of like blase or whatever.
937
00:56:55,701 --> 00:56:58,022
And it's like height new wave.
938
00:56:58,100 --> 00:56:59,866
Right, everyone's like this and whatever.
939
00:56:59,866 --> 00:57:04,593
And in the middle of it, they have the black keys come out and everyone boo's them.
940
00:57:04,593 --> 00:57:05,003
Right?
941
00:57:05,003 --> 00:57:06,324
Everyone booze them.
942
00:57:06,324 --> 00:57:14,097
And you think at this point that it's going to be like the case everyone from the Blase,
but then they start going on the road with these people and they start playing entrance
943
00:57:14,097 --> 00:57:15,288
themes for everybody.
944
00:57:15,288 --> 00:57:17,779
And wouldn't you know it, rock and roll is getting over.
945
00:57:17,779 --> 00:57:23,652
Everybody's so sick of the machinery and that sort of thing that's going on in the past.
946
00:57:23,652 --> 00:57:25,333
And they go rock and roll.
947
00:57:25,333 --> 00:57:27,734
And so now all of a sudden they come back and do it again.
948
00:57:27,734 --> 00:57:29,815
And we've got like a 50-50 split going on.
949
00:57:29,815 --> 00:57:33,567
Now there's signs in the crowd that say machines will not replace us.
950
00:57:33,567 --> 00:57:34,490
Stuff like that.
951
00:57:34,490 --> 00:57:34,971
Right?
952
00:57:34,971 --> 00:57:36,092
Yeah, all right.
953
00:57:36,092 --> 00:57:37,283
the signs, right?
954
00:57:37,283 --> 00:57:38,824
Long live rock and roll.
955
00:57:38,824 --> 00:57:40,055
Okay, I get it.
956
00:57:40,055 --> 00:57:42,707
Right, and so this is going on as an undercurrent.
957
00:57:42,707 --> 00:57:45,839
We tag them on to tie everything together here, right?
958
00:57:45,839 --> 00:57:51,626
So like, Coleman, seems like it's gonna culminate with the two of them playing the
entrance rings.
959
00:57:51,626 --> 00:57:53,568
And wouldn't you know who they're playing to the ring?
960
00:57:53,568 --> 00:57:55,889
The greatest rivalry of all time.
961
00:57:55,889 --> 00:57:58,291
Soft Cell plays out the Midnight Express.
962
00:57:58,291 --> 00:58:00,654
And wouldn't you know who plays out rock and roll?
963
00:58:00,654 --> 00:58:01,075
Right?
964
00:58:01,075 --> 00:58:02,916
The rock and roll express come out to
965
00:58:02,916 --> 00:58:05,037
the black keys, right?
966
00:58:05,037 --> 00:58:07,519
And so here's the match and everything going on.
967
00:58:07,519 --> 00:58:10,131
But then like soft cell slinks to the side of the ring.
968
00:58:10,131 --> 00:58:12,663
They're going to cheat for the midnight, right?
969
00:58:12,663 --> 00:58:14,073
They're out there with Jim Cornette.
970
00:58:14,073 --> 00:58:17,666
They get the big hug and everything that's on there too.
971
00:58:17,666 --> 00:58:22,669
Mark Allman's got a glittery tennis racket, right?
972
00:58:22,669 --> 00:58:28,343
And who comes to the aid of them from backstage running in with their instruments as well,
right?
973
00:58:28,343 --> 00:58:29,255
To use his weapons?
974
00:58:29,255 --> 00:58:32,956
To use his weapons, smeared with the bass guitar, right?
975
00:58:32,956 --> 00:58:33,436
on there.
976
00:58:33,436 --> 00:58:36,398
Corny takes the bump because he gets backsided by the way.
977
00:58:36,398 --> 00:58:39,189
We never want to have somebody take it see it coming right?
978
00:58:39,189 --> 00:58:44,403
Like they hit him from behind and then you know and then they slide a symbol into the
ring.
979
00:58:44,403 --> 00:58:45,043
Love it.
980
00:58:45,043 --> 00:58:45,534
Right?
981
00:58:45,534 --> 00:58:47,045
How people don't do that more?
982
00:58:47,045 --> 00:58:48,586
That's the finish right?
983
00:58:48,586 --> 00:58:50,626
Right in the eye.
984
00:58:51,544 --> 00:58:55,842
A bloodied Ricky Martin takes the symbol looks up right?
985
00:58:55,842 --> 00:59:01,762
hits sweet Stanley and right in the eye he runs over, one, two, three, roll up, out.
986
00:59:01,762 --> 00:59:08,393
But at this point, Jim Cornette is managing soft sell and says, my boys can take in this
thing.
987
00:59:08,393 --> 00:59:11,161
We've really gone on a ride.
988
00:59:11,249 --> 00:59:12,099
this is easy.
989
00:59:12,099 --> 00:59:18,322
The idea is that you want to tell the story that never ends with everything so we could
keep this going indefinitely and bring people in take them out.
990
00:59:18,322 --> 00:59:24,325
So then the next thing we're doing we've got a match here where it's like loser leaves the
territory.
991
00:59:24,325 --> 00:59:27,806
The song will never be played, never be replaced again.
992
00:59:27,806 --> 00:59:29,028
Never writes again.
993
00:59:29,028 --> 00:59:30,230
Never write, never.
994
00:59:30,230 --> 00:59:33,551
Like if your champion was using the black key song it's out now.
995
00:59:33,551 --> 00:59:35,003
They gotta find something new.
996
00:59:35,003 --> 00:59:38,748
And by the way, furthermore, anybody who is using a black key song now
997
00:59:38,748 --> 00:59:50,332
to use the soft sell song is their entrance and anybody who's using the soft sell song
exactly all right so so what we got to do because we've got people in here who cannot work
998
00:59:50,332 --> 00:59:59,952
in any way whatsoever so what do we got all surrounding the ring so no one can escape all
the wrestlers using the themes we got them they got a lumberjack match out of this
999
00:59:59,952 --> 01:00:00,482
Right?
Speaker:
01:00:00,482 --> 01:00:01,893
Back and forth, right?
Speaker:
01:00:01,893 --> 01:00:04,895
Soft Cell is just doing the most cheating things possible.
Speaker:
01:00:04,895 --> 01:00:09,248
They are cheating in every human possible way that's going on.
Speaker:
01:00:09,248 --> 01:00:18,174
We've got powder, we've got fire, we've got just like other things where like they like
they cue the Light Man to blind him in the eyes with the same sort of thing.
Speaker:
01:00:18,174 --> 01:00:22,527
We've got everything we could possibly have because Soft Cell ain't winning a fair fight
here.
Speaker:
01:00:22,527 --> 01:00:23,537
I'm speechless.
Speaker:
01:00:23,537 --> 01:00:24,698
I don't...
Speaker:
01:00:24,732 --> 01:00:25,802
I don't even know what to say.
Speaker:
01:00:25,802 --> 01:00:26,363
Right.
Speaker:
01:00:26,363 --> 01:00:29,914
And then when things look worse, that the same sort of thing, right?
Speaker:
01:00:29,914 --> 01:00:33,777
The biggest rock and roller at ringside who's super pumped, right?
Speaker:
01:00:33,777 --> 01:00:36,129
They've been the biggest supporter of the black keys.
Speaker:
01:00:36,129 --> 01:00:36,849
Right?
Speaker:
01:00:36,849 --> 01:00:39,511
Like, like says, yeah, let's get them.
Speaker:
01:00:39,511 --> 01:00:49,055
Cold Cox, one of the black keys reveals the most new wave sort of space age shirt at the
same sort of thing and says long live synth, baby.
Speaker:
01:00:49,055 --> 01:00:49,656
Right.
Speaker:
01:00:49,656 --> 01:00:50,757
One, two, three.
Speaker:
01:00:50,757 --> 01:00:51,771
I'm sorry.
Speaker:
01:00:51,771 --> 01:00:57,606
two years, three years, it's nothing but synth wave and nothing but new wave and anything
like that for entrances.
Speaker:
01:00:57,606 --> 01:01:03,265
what happens when this punk rock duo called the X Bombers comes into the territory?
Speaker:
01:01:03,265 --> 01:01:06,423
You just booked yourself into this fictitious thing.
Speaker:
01:01:06,423 --> 01:01:07,004
I did.
Speaker:
01:01:07,004 --> 01:01:11,738
it's because we write Cornett off for a bit.
Speaker:
01:01:11,738 --> 01:01:15,663
But then Cornett comes back with our theme and we go, what?
Speaker:
01:01:15,663 --> 01:01:15,801
Wow.
Speaker:
01:01:15,801 --> 01:01:20,509
You know, it's a real shame that I don't have a time machine that I can't make this
happen.
Speaker:
01:01:20,509 --> 01:01:22,869
Can you imagine what I've done here?
Speaker:
01:01:22,869 --> 01:01:24,595
Can you imagine what I could do for AEW?
Speaker:
01:01:24,595 --> 01:01:25,635
Yeah, I can imagine.
Speaker:
01:01:25,635 --> 01:01:26,935
Hour and a half, man.
Speaker:
01:01:26,935 --> 01:01:28,747
I make you a month and a half of TV.
Speaker:
01:01:28,747 --> 01:01:30,218
And all music centric too.
Speaker:
01:01:30,218 --> 01:01:31,290
That's the beauty of it.
Speaker:
01:01:31,290 --> 01:01:35,534
Well, thank you to the both of you for making the time to come on ropes and riffs today.
Speaker:
01:01:35,534 --> 01:01:36,716
This was awesome.
Speaker:
01:01:36,716 --> 01:01:41,342
I love having a conversation with you about your music, music and wrestlers as we always
do.
Speaker:
01:01:41,342 --> 01:01:43,991
And I hope to have you back on coming up as well.
Speaker:
01:01:43,991 --> 01:01:52,100
Yeah, we love that we've got some exciting kind of projects going on for a couple of
wrestlers too that we don't like to talk about them until they're like concrete and
Speaker:
01:01:52,100 --> 01:01:53,161
they're using them.
Speaker:
01:01:53,161 --> 01:01:54,611
Yeah, because that's always the
Speaker:
01:01:54,611 --> 01:01:57,157
for wrestlers is you don't talk about writing for wrestlers.
Speaker:
01:01:57,540 --> 01:01:58,641
Basically.
Speaker:
01:01:59,623 --> 01:02:00,034
true.
Speaker:
01:02:00,034 --> 01:02:01,995
John, appreciate it.
Speaker:
01:02:01,995 --> 01:02:03,977
It's the merging of our two worlds.
Speaker:
01:02:03,977 --> 01:02:07,900
So when we saw that this show was in existence, we're all like, this is fantastic.
Speaker:
01:02:07,900 --> 01:02:09,001
This is our people.
Speaker:
01:02:09,001 --> 01:02:14,206
so we're a very small group of people who write in this arena.
Speaker:
01:02:14,206 --> 01:02:16,473
So I'm so glad we got to do this.
Speaker:
01:02:16,473 --> 01:02:17,000
Absolutely.
Speaker:
01:02:17,000 --> 01:02:17,733
Thank you guys.