Dragon Ball: Original USA TV Soundtrack Recording is the official US soundtrack Dragon Ball. It was recorded in 1995 and released in album form two years later during 1997, along with Saban's English dub soundtrack for Dragon Ball Z. The score was written and composed by Vancouver-based musician Peter Berring, who was hired by the dub's producer Funimation. It includes the theme song known by fans as "Gotta Find That Dragon Ball!" which was written by Brian Griffith. It is the only US soundtrack of the show to be produced for the consumer.

Dragon Ball Z: Original USA Television Soundtrack is the first US domestic soundtrack for Dragon Ball Z, released in 1997. It features 12 tracks of music from Saban Entertainment's soundtrack for the Saiyan arc. All of the music (excluding the opening and closing themes) was written and performed by Ron Wasserman during 1996 at his home in Los Angeles,[2] although Shuki Levy and Kussa Mahehi (Haim Saban) were credited on the album for contractual reasons.


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Dragonball Z American Soundtrack series is the domestic soundtrack collection drawn from Bruce Faulconer's music for Dragon Ball Z; Faulconer's music for the series was commissioned by Funimation. These soundtracks were produced by Faulconer between 2001 and 2005.[4]

Dragonball Z American Soundtrack The Best of Dragonball Z: Volume I is the first 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 8, 2001.[5]

Dragonball Z American Soundtrack The Best of Dragonball Z: Volume II is the second 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 8, 2001.[6]

Dragonball Z American Soundtrack The Best of Dragonball Z: Volume III is the third release in the Dragonball Z American Soundtrack series of the anime Dragon Ball Z. The music contained on the soundtrack was composed and performed by Bruce Faulconer, and was recorded at CakeMix Recording. The album was released by Faulconer Productions Music on May 8, 2001.[7]

Dragonball Z American Soundtrack The Best of Dragonball Z: Volume IV is the fourth 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 August 5, 2003.[8]

Dragonball Z American Soundtrack Dragonball Z: Trunks Compendium I was the first release in the Dragon Ball Z American Soundtrack series of the anime Dragon Ball Z. The soundtrack was composed by Bruce Faulconer and was recorded at CakeMix Recording. It was released by Faulconer Productions Music on April 24, 2001. This album is considered a character album, featuring music related to one of Faulconer's favorite characters, Trunks.[10]

Dragonball Z American Soundtrack Dragonball Z: Buu the Majin Sagas is the sixth 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 August 5, 2003.[11]

Dragonball Z American Soundtrack Android 18: The Android Sagas is the seventh 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 September 9, 2003. This is a character album dedicated to Android 18.[12]

Dragonball Z American Soundtrack The Best of Dragonball Z: Volume V is the eighth 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 July 13, 2004.[13]

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.[14]

Dragon Ball Kai: Original Soundtrack is the first official soundtrack of the anime Dragon Ball Z Kai released on August 19, 2009, on CD in Japan only.[17] The soundtrack includes the opening, ending, and background music from the show. There is a limited edition available including three bonus tracks and a Data Carddass card holder.[18] The soundtrack includes thirty-three tracks. Some of those tracks include TV-size versions of the opening and ending themes (previously released in CD singles, episode recap and preview music, and more. The limited edition include three extra bonus tracks.

Akira Toriyama: The World ( , Toriyama Akira za Wrudo) is an image soundtrack featuring music from three anime film adaptations of works by Akira Toriyama: Dragon Ball Z: Chiky Marugoto Chkessen, Pink: Water Bandit, Rain Bandit and Kennosuke-sama. It was released by Columbia Records on July 7, 1990. Tracks 2-4 would go on to be included in Dragon Ball Z Complete Song Collection 4: Promise of Eternity.

I've been trying to find the title to the music that plays at the very beginning of the first episode of dragon ball when the narrator starts talking about Goku being found in the wilderness. It comes up throughout the original show but I can't find a title or just the music by itself anywhere.

So recently I discovered that most of the soundtrack for the Dragon Ball Music has suddenly and mysteriously vanished out of nowhere without any explanation. I'm talking about the music that was on Spotify and other streaming platforms because I can't seem to find any explanation for this.

I don't know why I wondered if the soundtrack of DBZ changes depending on the dub. The Japanese and the spanish dub are with the same soundtrack (I love it, the best soundtrack ever) but in english is different. Is it in all the series different?

I remember watching dbz awhile back and hearing the slide whistle during some of the battle scenes. I was interested in watching dbz all the way through again with that same soundtrack but I can't seem to find any info about which version I should be watching. I know for certain that it was the English dub but nothing more than that. If anyone knows what I'm talking about and could point me in the right direction that would be awesome.

If this is the first time you read about video game music on vinyl (aka VGMvinyl), we'd like to invite you to our wonderful community and want to recommend you some blogs, Discord Channels and sub-reddits that we think you should follow for all the latest news and updates from the world of game soundtracks on vinyl. We'll soon launch a new blog with some exciting updates from the Black Screen Records HQ. Stay tuned!

One of the things that I think absolutely holds up about these games is the soundtrack. Budokai, Budokai 2 and Budokai 3 all had awesome soundtracks, a great mix of guitars and horns. Unfortunately the composer for those games, Kenji Yamamoto (no relation to the Super Metroid composer) recently got in trouble for his work on Dragon Ball Kai, in which he plagiarized a lot of songs from movie soundtracks, and older songs of his have also been discovered to have plagiarism in them as well. As such, Namco Bandai has responded by replacing the music in Budokai 1 and 3 with music found in the Tenkaichi and Raging Blast games.

Well, thankfully for me, I hardly care about the soundtrack (though I liked the menu screen's music in Budokai 3, I seem to recall) so it's fine. I just want to replay the great battles in the best battle system I've seen a Dragonball Z game feature, after having recently gotten back into Dragonball. I've just started a Japanese education which will hopefully see me relatively fluent in Japanese five years from now, and I'm now rewatching all those episodes--in Japanese. It's better than I remembered it being, even.

Taking full advantage of the power of Xbox 360, Blue Dragonengages players in a world and characters that are brought to lifewith vibrant colors and detail, from Shu's wild hair to his martialarts-style garb, conveying the beautiful simplicity and sense ofadventure found in this truly next-generation RPG. For moreinformation on the game, visit www.xbox.com/bluedragon. ff782bc1db

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