Sounds silly but yeah, I like to listen to every power ranger song, all of them are unique up until samurai. I never finish them, but man listening to their theme song turn me off. The " go go power ranger" is too repetitive. At least make the melody different. And I hate how they combine goseiger and gokaiger into one team. Wish they made it different team. Dino charge songs are ok I guess, I never watch the show. Hasbro era rangers theme song suck. Maybe it's just nostalgia that isclouding my judgement. But I just want to vent out my thoughts.

"Go Go Power Rangers" is a song by Ron Wasserman who recorded it under the name Aaron Waters - The Mighty RAW. It was released by Saban Records, later renamed Saban Music Group of Saban Capital Group,[1] on CD and cassette formats in the US on December 2, 1994, and in the UK December 14, 1994. The song serves as the opening theme for the first three seasons of the original Power Rangers series Mighty Morphin Power Rangers. It was composed using keyboard only, preloaded with guitar and drum sound since Ron Wasserman does not play either instrument.[2] The song, with minor alterations of its lyrics, was also used for the mini-series Alien Rangers. The titular refrain, "Go Go Power Rangers!", has become a popular catchphrase associated with the show, and it has been used in several other themes for the series.


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A cover of the song, performed by Noam Kaniel, was used as the show's intro theme from 2011 up to 2014, starting with the 18th season of the franchise, Power Rangers Samurai. A rearrangement of Kaniel's version was used for 2013's Power Rangers Megaforce, revising some lyrics to reflect that season. The lyrics "Go Go Power Rangers" were incorporated into otherwise-new theme songs for Power Rangers Dino Charge, Power Rangers Ninja Steel, Power Rangers Beast Morphers, and Power Rangers Dino Fury.

The song, when used as the main theme for Power Rangers Samurai and Power Rangers Super Samurai, was performed by Noam Kaniel. Different arrangements, with some of the lyrics altered for each, were used for the subsequent series, including Power Rangers Megaforce and Power Rangers Super Megaforce; Power Rangers Dino Charge and Power Rangers Dino Super Charge; and Power Rangers Ninja Steel, all of which were also performed by Kaniel.

Morph into Red Ranger with the Power Ranger Deluxe Training Helmet. Includes messages from Red Ranger and the Super Samurai theme song! Wear the Power Rangers Deluxe Training Helmet in Mega mode to defeat the villains. Or gain even more power by morphing the Helmet from Mega mode into Shogun mode with a quick conversion of the crown. This helmet is the perfect addition to all the Power Rangers gear!

The first season produced by Haim Saban after taking the license back from Disney, Saban was banking on nostalgia for the original Mighty Morphin' Power Rangers. They revived the classic theme song and referenced it in the morph call, and they got Paul Schrier to reprise his role as Bulk, half of the original series' Those Two Guys. The approach appeared to pay off where it counted, as Samurai did pull in solid ratings, unlike Jungle Fury and RPM, and easily got renewed.

Succeeded by Power Rangers Megaforce.Recurring Power Rangers tropes include: Adapted Out: ShinkenGold's Transformation Trinket, the Sushi Changer, was replaced with a recolored and modified version of the Samuraizer called the Samurai Morpher. Oddly enough, the toys of both were visually based on the Samurai Morpher, despite having some physical differences in the show besides color. Big Bad: Master Xandred. Big "WHAT?!": Commonly uttered by the villains. Chest Insignia: The team logo on the left over the heart and personal kanji on the face of the helmet. Brought to You by the Letter "S": The kanji qualify. Chrome Champion: The Gold Ranger has a lot of blue on his suit (black in Mega Mode), but enough shiny gold bits to count. City of Adventure: Panorama City. Its name wasn't revealed until episode 30, visible on close-up shots of Mia's driver's license. Comic-Book Adaptation: Had a run in the UK Power Rangers Magazine. Two graphic novels were published by Papercutz. Compressed Adaptation: A downplayed example. Samurai was given 2 seasons of 20 regular episodes, a Christmas Special and Halloween Special each to Shinkenger's 49. There's also the Clash of the Red Rangers TV movie, which combines a regular episode of Shinkengernote #36 with supplementary materialnote Shinkenger The Movie and Shinkenger vs. Go-Onger. The Dragon: Serrator Evil Plan: Xandred's plan to use humans' tears of despair to make the Sanzu flood the human world. Filling the Silence: During segments utilizing sentai footage (including Megazord fights), everyone is ridiculously chatty, including the Monster of the Week. Tropes Are Not Bad, though - the main fight scene in "A Sticky Situation" involved the Green and Blue Rangers having to coordinate attacks, so the addition of them giving each other instructions on what to do next helped. Five-Token Band: The Red and Yellow Rangers are Caucasian, the Blue Ranger is African-American, the Green Ranger is Latino, the Pink Ranger is Asian, and the Gold Ranger is Mexican-American (blatantly and stereotypically so). Fleeting Demographic Rule: The last time that Power Rangers had this many puns and this much Japanese culture was Power Rangers Ninja Storm, eight years before. Incidentally, Ninja Storm was also the only previous season to have a Samurai-based Ranger. Ninja Storm itself is this to the third season of Mighty Morphin' Power Rangers, also with an eight year gap. Freaky. Home Base: The Shiba House Humongous Mecha: The Samurai Megazord Animal Mecha Bears Are Bad News: Bear Zord King of Beasts: Lion Zord Our Dragons Are Different: Dragon Zord Turtles: Turtle Zord Mischief-Making Monkey: Ape Zord Big Creepy-Crawlies: Beetle Zord Swordfish Sabre: Swordfish Zord Panthera Awesome: Tiger Zord Noble Bird of Prey: the Samurai Battlewing, formed from the Beetle, Swordfish, and Tiger Zords Giant Squid: Octozord Giant Enemy Crab (giant arthropod, at any rate; it's a lobster): Clawzord Threatening Shark: Shark Zord Brutish Bulls: Bull Zord Combining Mecha: The main team shares the Samurai Megazord, and it can then join with the Clawzord to form the Claw Armor Megazord. The secondary zords can combine, too; the Beetle, Tiger, and Swordfish form the Samurai Battlewing and those three plus the Octozord are the Samurai Battle Cannon. Finally, all of the above mecha can combine with the Bull Zord and optionally the Shark Zord for the Samurai Gigazord. Mecha Expansion Pack: The Beetle, Tiger, Swordfish, Octo, and Shark Zords Transforming Mecha: The Folding Zords (rather than the usual warrior mode, they change to and from a compact emblem mode), the Clawzord, the Light Zord, and the Bullzord Make My Monster Grow: The "second life" concept from Shinkenger carries over here - the monsters just kinda grow on their own after blowing up. The Mentor: Ji, though Everyone Calls Him "Mentor" more often than not. Mini Dress Of Power: Part of the Samurai Ranger girls' suits. Of course, this includes the female Red Ranger. Mooks: Moogers, including Megazord-sized Giant Mook versions. Motifs: Elemental Powers Playing with Fire: Jayden Making a Splash: Kevin Blow You Away: Mia (who even names the trope in "Origins Part 1") Green Thumb: Mike Dishing Out Dirt: Emily Light 'em Up: Antonio. He also has a seafood motif on top of that. Never Say "Die": Sure, pretty standard fare for Power Rangers, but it's especially noticable with the kids in "Deal with a Nighlok" and "Jayden's Challenge"; their problems were switched to fathers far away for their jobs from a dead grandfather in the former, and in the latter a father who'd actually died in a recent monster attack. It's especially baffling given that other series haven't shied away from people having someone die in the backstory, and Never Say "Die" has usually presented as simply finding alternatives to the word. Pretending nothing really bad ever has or can happen to anyone is definitely new. But the second half goes Darker and Edgier and bad things definitely do happen to good people. It's also noticable because of a plot point: Jayden doesn't want his friends to die for him, and as such tried to abandon the team. Since we can't say "die", we get a lot of "Don't want to put them in harm's way"s, or "We know the risks". Sometimes it can get even confusing. That said, the origin makes references to Jayden's dad's "last words" and his "final battle". They don't use the word dead (as usual), but there's really no other way to take it. Ooh, Me Accent's Slipping: As Saban has taken to hire Americans for the primary cast here in, this doesn't come up as much compared to the Disney era. However, the show is still shot in Auckland, so this is now mostly reserved for the guest characters. Could also apply to Mentor Ji, though in his case it might be just Not Even Bothering with the Accent. Emily's sister in "Sticks and Stones." The Kids Are American: Basically the majority of the kids so far, whether they're portraying younger versions of the Rangers or regular kids, have been unable to hide their New Zealand accents. Especially noticable when compared to the American accents used by adults in the same scene (Ryan and his dad in "Deal with a Nighlok" and Young!- and current-Jayden and Antonio in "Unexpected Arrival"). Precursor Heroes: The original samurai Heroic Lineage: ...and their descendants. Recycled IN SPACE!: Power Rangers as SAMURAI! (Of course.) Sealed Evil in a Can: The Sanzu River is one to the Nighloks, as nobody can last long away from the river before they dry out. Only a monster and some Mooks are able to go out at a time, trying to increase peoples' despair and sorrow in order to make the Sanzu's water level rise until it seeps into and floods the human world. Master Xandred was sealed in the river by Jayden's father. Due to the seal being done wrong (which stems from the previous Red Ranger having insufficient power at the time), it causes him headaches. "The Master Returns" seems to imply that he's still trapped to some degree, as flashbacks show he could previously leave the Sanzu River without drying out, a problem he has now. Super Mode: Literally called "Super Mode", with a long white vest over the regular Ranger suit. There's also a red version called "Shark Attack Mode", and both of these have their own Mega Mode versions. (The Mega Modes and Shogun Mode look like this, but since they're not actually used for fighting, they don't count. Jayden uses the Shogun Mode at the final episode, though.) Thememobile: Averted; the Samurai Rangers have some transportation at their disposal (a Van in Black and Ji's Cool Bike), but no special Ranger vehicles. Villains Act, Heroes React: As is the norm for Power Rangers, we generally get a MOTW appearing with an Evil Plan Once an Episode, with our heroes then arriving on the scene to stop them. Word Power By the Power of Grayskull! or Invocation: "Go Go Samurai!" and "Gold Power!" Bond One-Liner: "Samurai Rangers, victory is ours." In the Name of the Moon: "Rangers Together! Samurai Forever!" Transformation Name Announcement: "Samurai Ranger, ready!" and "Samurai Megazord! We are united!" be457b7860

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