From Stone Cold’s Glass to Taker’s Bells: Jim Johnston's Sonic Kayfabe episode artwork

EPISODE · Jan 6, 2026 · 1H 1M

From Stone Cold’s Glass to Taker’s Bells: Jim Johnston's Sonic Kayfabe

from Tape Spaghetti · host Blake Wyland & Scott Marquart

If thinking about the sounds of glass shattering or funeral bells tolling on live TV send chills down your spine, you've already met Jim Johnston —you just didn’t know his name. In this episode of Tape Spaghetti, Scott & Blake break kayfabe and pull back the curtain on how WWE's most legendary entrance themes, which often emerged out of pure chaos. The in-house composer who scored wrestling's golden era under absurd pressure, Johnston often had as little as 90 minutes to write the music that would define a character forever.... but somehow he nailed it again and again and again. The guys break down his creative process, from layering car crash sounds to evoke violence, to writing funeral music rooted in childhood loneliness, to inventing gibberish death-metal lyrics because, well, no one would understand them anyway. They also dig into Johnston’s fraught relationship with WWE, publishing trade-offs, and why modern wrestling themes just don’t hit the same. It’s part music theory, part pro wrestling lore, and part love letter to the sounds that could make an arena explode before a single haymaker was thrown.

If thinking about the sounds of glass shattering or funeral bells tolling on live TV send chills down your spine, you've already met Jim Johnston —you just didn’t know his name. In this episode of Tape Spaghetti, Scott & Blake break kayfabe and pull back the curtain on how WWE's most legendary entrance themes, which often emerged out of pure chaos. The in-house composer who scored wrestling's golden era under absurd pressure, Johnston often had as little as 90 minutes to write the music that would define a character forever.... but somehow he nailed it again and again and again. The guys break down his creative process, from layering car crash sounds to evoke violence, to writing funeral music rooted in childhood loneliness, to inventing gibberish death-metal lyrics because, well, no one would understand them anyway. They also dig into Johnston’s fraught relationship with WWE, publishing trade-offs, and why modern wrestling themes just don’t hit the same. It’s part music theory, part pro wrestling lore, and part love letter to the sounds that could make an arena explode before a single haymaker was thrown.

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From Stone Cold’s Glass to Taker’s Bells: Jim Johnston's Sonic Kayfabe

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This episode was published on January 6, 2026.

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If thinking about the sounds of glass shattering or funeral bells tolling on live TV send chills down your spine, you've already met Jim Johnston —you just didn’t know his name. In this episode of Tape Spaghetti, Scott & Blake break kayfabe and...

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