WrestleMania: The Album

WrestleMania: The Album
Soundtrack album by World Wrestling Federation
Released 1993
Recorded 1992 PWL Studios, London.
Genre Pop, rock, new jack swing
Label Arista, RCA Records
Producer Simon Cowell, Mike Stock, Pete Waterman, Dave Ford, Gary Miller
World Wrestling Federation chronology
Piledriver – The Wrestling Album 2
(1987)
WrestleMania: The Album
(1993)
WWF Full Metal
(1996)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]

WrestleMania: The Album[2] was an album released by World Wrestling Federation Superstars in 1993.

Mike Stock and Pete Waterman (of Britain's famed Stock Aitken Waterman songwriting team) oversaw the project as producers and co-composers for RCA Records, with British A&R executive Simon Cowell serving as the executive producer.[3] The album failed to chart on the US Billboard 200 but reached #10 in the UK.[4]

Track listing

  1. World Wrestling Federation Superstars - "WrestleMania" (Mike Stock, Pete Waterman) 1
  2. World Wrestling Federation Superstars - "Slam Jam" (Mike Stock, Pete Waterman)
  3. "Hacksaw" Jim Duggan - "USA" (Dave Ford, Mike Stock, Pete Waterman)
  4. The Nasty Boys - "Nasty Boy Stomp" (Dave Ford, Mike Stock, Pete Waterman) 2
  5. Bret "Hitman" Hart - "Never Been A Right Time To Say Goodbye" (Mike Stock, Pete Waterman)
  6. The Undertaker - "The Man In Black" (Gary Miller, Mike Stock, Pete Waterman)
  7. "Macho Man" Randy Savage - "Speaking From The Heart" (Asha Elfenbein, Tony King, Mike Stock, Pete Waterman)
  8. Tatanka - "Tatanka Native American" (Gary Ford, Mike Stock, Pete Waterman)
  9. Mr. Perfect - "I'm Perfect" (Dave Ford) 3
  10. Crush - "Cold Crush" (Paul Waterman) [UK version only]
  11. The Big Boss Man - "Hard Times" (Mike Stock, Pete Waterman) 3
  12. World Wrestling Federation Superstars - "Slam Jam (12" Full Nelson Mix)" (Mike Stock, Pete Waterman) [UK Version only]

Notes

  1. An instrumental version of "WrestleMania" was used as the theme song for WrestleManias X (1994) through XIV (1998). It was also later used as Linda McMahon's entrance music.
  2. The Nasty Boys Stomp borrowed the percussion and a very similar bass beat from the song "Visions of China" by Japan as well as "Nasty" by Janet Jackson.
  3. Incorporated elements from the wrestler's entrance music.

Singles

See also

References

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