Despite these legal hurdles, X-Men '97 -- which features a score composed by the Newton Brothers --will contain a version of the classic melody that opened all five seasons of X-Men: The Animated Series. The show debuted in 1992 and featured an action-packed introduction that featured Cyclops, Wolverine, Rogue, Storm, Beast, Gambit, Jubilee, Jean Grey and Professor X. The accompanying song has since become renowned as one of the most memorable cartoon themes of the '90s, and brief interpolations of it can be heard in recent Marvel Cinematic Universe media.

The X-Men cartoon theme was originally composed by Ron Wasserman, who also created the iconic "Go Go Power Rangers" theme for Mighty Morphin Power Rangers. The theme song was the subject of a lawsuit in 2019 for sharing similarities with the opening tune of Linda, a Hungarian cop show that ran from 1984 to 1990.


X-men Cartoon Soundtrack Download


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X-Men '97 picks up where the original cartoon left off, featuring the iconic mutants of the '90s in all new stories. The series does not yet have a release date, but it will eventually debut on Disney+.

Volume 5 of the Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe A-Z Hardcovers lists the X-Men cartoon as part of the Marvel multiverse, inhabiting Earth-92131. Also, the plague-infested future that Bishop tried to prevent in Season 2 is listed as Earth-13393 while Cable's release of the immediate cure of the plague is listed as Earth-121893.

In its prime, X-Men garnered very high ratings for a Saturday morning cartoon, and it received praise for adapting many different storylines from the comics. Haim Saban credits the success of the series in assisting him to sell his next project to Fox, the live action series Mighty Morphin Power Rangers.[3]

In January 2022 Marvel announced a new series inspired by the cartoon, X-Men '92: House of XCII. Scheduled for publication in April of that same year, the series will explore an alternate universe where the events of Jonathan Hickman's House of X and Powers of X happened decades earlier, in the '90s of the original show.[29]

Starting with the first episode of Season 4, "Impact", the episode title was no longer aired on-screen at the beginning of the show, and X-Men: Evolution became the third longest-running Marvel cartoon, behind Spider-Man: The Animated Series (5 seasons, 65 episodes) and X-Men: The Animated Series (5 seasons, 76 episodes). Boyd Kirkland, the show's producer, says his favorite X-Men: Evolution season is Season 3.[5] The monthly budget for X-Men: Evolution was $350,000.[citation needed]

I like that video game music soundtrack. it reminds me of both the nes and super nes version of the arcade video game music soundtrack of: capcom marvel's x-men: children of the atom (arcade video game music soundtrack).

^This isn't the 1992 Konami Arcade game beat em^ up version of X-men (Based off the 1989 TV Pilot)


This is based off the first X-men fighting Arcade game made by Capcom which would later be in the Vs. Capcom series.


Anyw ay good soundtrack

The X-Men are a fictional superhero group that has played an important role in my life. I really loved their cartoons on television when I was a kid, and when I was in college and the first X-Men live-action movie hit the theaters, I went to see it with my friends. Since then I have seen all the sequels and prequels of the franchise. I even caught some episodes of more recent cartoons on TV or on the internet. In addition to being entertaining movies, many of them are also accompanied by a good score. John Ottman is one of the regular composers for these movies, but other composers have written music for X-Men movies as well, like the late Michael Kamen, Henry Jackman and John Powell, who composed one of my all-time favorite scores: X-Men: The Last Stand. In March 2017 Hans Zimmer announced in an interview that he would stop composing music for superhero movies. He broke that promise after more than two years when the announcement came that he would be the composer for the latest X-Men installment: X-Men: Dark Phoenix. When I heard this news, I was quite surprised because most other X-Men scores are quite orchestral, and that is not really the style Zimmer is going for nowadays.

I rewatched the Batman v. Superman UE on blu-ray and noted that the theme is played on multiple occassions, always tied to Wonder Woman being on screen. My question is: is this theme an original piece scored for BvS and reused in the Wonder Woman trailer, or is this taken from some prior music used in older media? Perhaps the Linda Carter show, Justice League cartoons, or some other Wonder Woman piece?

Though short-lived on its original run, this show from Jay Ward and Bill Scott (creators of Rocky and Bullwinkle) consists of three segments, two of which make this list. In the cartoon pantheon, George is probably most famous for his theme, which contains everything you need to know about the show.

X-Men: Apocalypse (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) is a soundtrack composed by John Ottman. The music on this soundtrack was taken from X-Men: Apocalypse. This soundtrack can be listened to on Spotify.

And considering how weird the theme song of the show's predecessor, the one-off animated pilot 'Pryde of the X-Men' was, maybe it's for the best that this one stuck to striking a tone rather than spelling out exactly who the X-Men are in a more typical cartoon fashion.

In terms of setting a bar for cartoon theme songs, it doesn't get much higher than Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. Any '80s/'90s kid can sing every word at the drop of a hat, and more than a few friend foursomes defined themselves by the descriptions of the Turtles posited by the song.

That robotic sounding voice, that synthesizer, that sweet, sweet taste of memory. So good as a cartoon theme, even better run through a wall full of Marshall stacks. When the ordinary theme goes through the metal grinder it gets turned into a loud, mean, and wailing mass of awesome. Either way, this is a killer piece of music, and nothing fits the subject matter of transforming robots better.

The X-Men cartoon from 1992 is superb. Last year I watched the entire series with my kids. Highly recommend the Spider-Man cartoon from that same era as well -- the art, writing, source material, etc. is cut from the same cloth. e24fc04721

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