Summary

Joe Hendry says a full album created with WWE Music is on the way this summer, adding another layer to the act that has helped make him one of the more distinctive personalities on WWE television.

While discussing his recent run, Hendry said most of the album was recorded in New York at WWE Studios. He added that he has since recreated that microphone setup at home, which should make it easier to keep working quickly on new material without flying back and forth.

That speed has already mattered for Hendry's music-based presentation. His recent Logan Paul material became part of his current WWE run, and Wrestling Remembers recently covered how Hendry turned that idea into a full WWE music video.

Quote from Joe Hendry

Speaking on Insight with Chris Van Vliet, Hendry said:

"Actually, I could drop an exclusive right here for people. Because this is actually very relevant. So this is an exclusive. I haven’t told anyone anywhere, but I have recorded an album with WWE Music, and it’s going to drop this summer. We recorded most of that in New York at the WWE Studios. So what I’ve done now is the microphones that we have there, I have basically replicated the setup back home now, so I don’t need to fly to New York to do it. I can send stuff in, and we can work on it back and forth. So that’s one of the things that makes these songs work, is because they’re fast and they’re topical, so we can basically, we obviously did the Logan Paul song on TV, but we were able to just get it done that week, because we could send files back and forth. But yes, there is an album coming out."

What the album means for Joe Hendry in WWE

Hendry's WWE presentation now clearly extends beyond entrance reactions and one-off parody lines. If this album arrives on schedule, it gives WWE another way to lean into a character who already connects with crowds through music and audience participation.

It also suggests Hendry's act is being treated as something the company can build around in real time. His own description of the recording process shows WWE wants those songs turned around quickly enough to stay tied to whatever he is doing on television.

Sources

Joe Hendry on Insight with Chris Van Vliet