00:00We'd be listening back and forth to our different records, different CDs at the time.
00:03My mom would come by the room and go, what are you listening to?
00:09What is on my workout mix?
00:11I mean, our phone's right here.
00:12I can literally tell you.
00:14We've got Oasis.
00:16It was a big comeback this year.
00:18Very exciting.
00:19Wasp.
00:20I saw them live in Glasgow when I was 18.
00:22Caught Blackie Lawless's towel.
00:24Very exciting.
00:24I also live in Nashville, so I do have George Jones and Hank Williams Jr. in there as well.
00:29Ozzy Osbourne.
00:30Obvious ones, ACDC, Guns N' Roses, Metallica.
00:34Stand Inside Your Love with Smashing Pumpkins.
00:36With Billy Corrigan, big wrestling guy.
00:38Owns a wrestling company.
00:39Beat Your Heart Out with the Distillers.
00:41Big Distillers guy.
00:43Oh, I used to love Brody.
00:44Still do.
00:45I mean, my journey into music was not.
00:48You know, heavier rock, certainly.
00:51I grew up in the house where my dad was always playing Elvis and Roy Orbison.
00:57And basically 50s and 60s was predominantly played throughout the house.
01:01Maybe some Whiter Shade of Pale as well.
01:05He loved that song, played all the time.
01:06Great song.
01:07And we would be in pubs as every, my brother and I, every Scottish kid would be when you're
01:13younger.
01:13Karaoke night, listening to everything from, you know, my dad would murder some Roy Orbison
01:19constantly.
01:20And it wasn't until I got a little bit older, my brother and I started expanding our music
01:24taste.
01:25And around about that time, I started working out when I was really young.
01:29And I started, like, listening to what the guys were listening to at the gym.
01:31When I first heard, like, a Metallica or a G&R, I was like, all right, this is speaking
01:36to me.
01:36It's making the exercise so much easier.
01:38And my brother got really big into rap at one point.
01:42We shared a room.
01:43So sometimes I would get an album.
01:44It was usually a heavier album than he would get, like, Dr. Dre 2001 or the Marshall Mathers
01:49LP, I remember.
01:50And we'd be listening back and forth to our different records, different CDs at the time.
01:54My mom would come by the room and go, what are you listening to?
01:57So it went from all the, you know, happy songs from back in the day to, oh my goodness,
02:03what is that man saying on that M&M record?
02:05Yeah, I mean, music is one of the most important things in my life.
02:09In my job, absolutely.
02:12It gets me psyched up for matches.
02:15It gets me thinking for the next step of the storylines, maybe something that's more
02:20suitable to where my character's going or whatever.
02:22It helps inspire me.
02:24But it just gets me through life.
02:26Like, no matter what kind of time I'm going through, there's always a song for it.
02:29If I'm feeling a little down, there's a song that's just going to match that tone.
02:33If I want to get back up, there's a song to match that.
02:36Like, music can literally change my feeling in a second.
02:39I'm a weirdo when it comes to music, actually.
02:41I watch, like, reviews of songs by people and people's reactions to songs that I really
02:47enjoy to see if they react the same way.
02:49Like, music is such an important part of my life.
02:51Like, music is such an important part of my life.
02:51Like, music is such an important part of my life.
02:51Like, music is such an important part of my life.
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