#2 Limp Bizkit contributed music to WWE
'Keep rollin, rollin, rollin, rollin!' blasted out at WWE WrestleMania 19 as The Undertaker made his entrance, to a thuderous reception. Fred Durst, the lead singer of Limp Bizkit, made it an iconic entrance for The Deadman. It will go down as one of the greatest entrances we've seen at WrestleMania.
At the time, Limp Bizkit was one of the coolest and most popular bands around, and WWE was affiliated with them already on numerous occasions, including using some of their songs at pay-per-view events.
The Undertaker spoke about his entrance at WrestleMania 19 with Loudwire:
"Rollin’ and being on the bike all tied in together. Again, another high-energy song, a song that a lot of people recognized and identified with. A wrestling match, in my eyes, doesn’t start at the bell. It starts when the music plays. As soon as that music kicks in, your match has started. It sets the tone for the entire match. It was a such a high-energy, fun song and still kind of badass and got people going, got them excited. The lyrics, obviously, weren’t quite the same, but the energy level was still where we wanted it to be." The Undertaker said (h/t Loudwire)
You will also find Limp Bizket attached to one of WWE's greatest pre-match promo's ever produced. Prior to The Rock and Stone Cold Steve Austin's main event at WrestleMania 18, their song 'My Way' was dubbed over the video package.
#1 Motörhead contributed music to WWE
The legendary Motörhead became affiliated with WWE, thanks to a friendship formed between Triple H and the band. Triple H's entrance theme 'The Game' is performed by Motörhead, and was performed live at WrestleMania 21 in Los Angeles in 2005.
Motörhead has also provided songs for Triple H, including his 'King of Kings' theme and 'Line In The Sand' for his stable Evolution. Motörhead frontman Lemmy Kilmister thanked Triple H for rejuvenating the band, as Triple H told Metal Injection:
"We were talking and [Lemmy] goes, ‘You’ve gotta look out there tonight. Wait until you see all the kids that are at our event. We didn’t have any of that before we started with you’" Triple H said (h/t Metal Injection)
Sadly, Lemmy passed away in 2015, but the band's connection with WWE will remain forever strong, with Triple H still using his Motörhead's songs as his themes when he appears.