The WWE Music Group crafts entrance themes that define characters like John Cena and Randy Orton.
For the full effect, listen to "The Time Is Now" right before a match bell. It's all there, the beat, the attitude, the reason these tracks stick.
WWE's music isn't about chart hits, it's about building a moment. A track like "The Time Is Now" with John Cena's rap vocals turns a walk to the ring into a signature event. These themes, from "Voices" to "I Came to Play," become part of wrestling's language, shaping how fans see the characters.
Starting as a department creating functional music for TV, WWE's sound evolved to match bigger personalities. By the mid-2000s, themes like "The Time Is Now" blended rock and rap more deliberately. They've kept that focus, working with composers to fit storylines without chasing mainstream albums.
Keep it compact: a lyric you come back to, a live memory, or the part of the catalog you would point someone toward first.
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