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Dragon Ball Z: Dead Zone; Dragon Ball Z: Fusion Reborn; Dragon Ball Z: Lord Slug; Dragon Ball Z: Super Android 13! Dragon Ball Z: The History of Trunks; Dragon Ball Z: The Return of Cooler; Dragon Ball Z: The Tree of Might; Dragon Ball Z: The World's Strongest; Dragon Ball Z: Wrath of the Dragon; Dragon Ball: Curse of the Blood Rubies; Dragon ...
Shunsuke Kikuchi (菊池 俊輔, Kikuchi Shunsuke, 1 November 1931 – 24 April 2021) was a Japanese composer who was active from the early 1960s until 2017. He specialized in incidental music for media such as television and film .
Dragon Ball Z has released a series of 21 soundtracks as part of the Dragon Ball Z Hit Song Collection series. In total, dozens of releases exist for Dragon Ball Z which includes Japanese and foreign adapted releases of the anime themes and video game soundtracks. Shunsuke Kikuchi composed the score for Dragon Ball Z.
Shunsuke Kikuchi, the composer for the popular “Dragon Ball” anime series, died on Saturday at a medical facility in Tokyo, according to the Japanese music industry outlet Oricon News. He was 89.
Dragonball Z American Soundtrack Best of Dragonball Z: Volume Six the Lost Tracks of DBZ is the ninth and final release from the Dragonball Z American Soundtrack series of the anime Dragon Ball Z. The soundtrack was written and composed by Bruce Faulconer, produced by Faulconer Productions Music and released on May 3, 2005.
The score for the Funimation English dub was composed by Mark Menza. The "Double Feature" release contains an alternate audio track containing the English dub with original Japanese background music by Shunsuke Kikuchi , an opening theme of "Cha-La Head-Cha-La", and an ending theme of "At the Brink: The Earth's Limit".
The score for the 2006 English dub's composed by Nathan Johnson. The Double Feature release that came out 2 years later in 2008 contains an alternate audio track containing the English dub with original Japanese background music by Shunsuke Kikuchi and the original ending theme, "Ikusa".
Shunsuke Kikuchi, the composer for the Dragon Ball anime, continue to compose the score for Dragon Ball Z. Goku's Japanese voice actress Masako Nozawa also continued to voice the character in adulthood, unlike in many foreign dubs, which often use female actresses for Goku as a child before switching to male actors when the character becomes a ...