The American Dub Replacement Score Purpose

Discussion regarding any musical aspect of the franchise, from game soundtracks to BGM to remixes. Upcoming & classic CDs, reviews, where to find them, and more!

Moderators: Kanzenshuu Staff, General Help

User avatar
Thanos
I'm, pretty, cozy, here...
Posts: 1661
Joined: Thu Jan 04, 2007 2:33 am
Location: South Korea

The American Dub Replacement Score Purpose

Post by Thanos » Wed Nov 07, 2012 11:37 pm

So, apparently, from what I understand, DBZ received a replacement score due to licensing/legal issues. Is this even true? That seems far-fetched to me. What reason might Shueisha have to give rights to localization without the music? Especially when the original Dragon Ball came over with its music no problem?

I honestly think their true intentions were to do this all along, to modernize it with that hard rock flavor kids in the 90's apparently love so much... or maybe this was what was admitted all along?
Thanos before Thanos was cool.

User avatar
JulieYBM
Patreon Supporter
Posts: 17659
Joined: Mon Jan 16, 2006 10:25 pm
Location: 🏳️‍⚧️🍉

Re: The American Dub Replacement Score Purpose

Post by JulieYBM » Wed Nov 07, 2012 11:52 pm

Toei Animation and Kikuchi Shunsuke want royalties. FUNimation, once operated on pennies, crackerjack box prizes, and run out of Fukunaga's garage, would not be able to afford those royalties. By commissioning their own music to use they could collect royalties. "Well, we could either make more money for Toei or use their cartoon to make more money for us. Us!" proclaimed the FUNimation production staff as they banged together their plastic cups full of generic store brand cola.
💙💜💖 She/Her 💙💜💖
💙💜💖 Don't forget to take your estrogen! 💙💜💖

User avatar
cRookie_Monster
OMG CRAZY REGEN
Posts: 951
Joined: Mon Oct 22, 2007 7:41 pm
Location: Seattle, WA
Contact:

Re: The American Dub Replacement Score Purpose

Post by cRookie_Monster » Thu Nov 08, 2012 3:13 pm

I'm 99% sure it would have been cheaper to license existing sparsely placed music as part of the package than to commission the creation of new wall to wall music. This is also part of why they don't bother anymore :) That and a host of other reasons.

It was about style, modernizing and Westernizing the score. The Japanese score was seen as being much too sparse and having a very dated sound.
- Scott
http://morganstudios.com

User avatar
dbboxkaifan
Banned
Posts: 8906
Joined: Wed Nov 02, 2011 11:32 pm

Re: The American Dub Replacement Score Purpose

Post by dbboxkaifan » Thu Nov 08, 2012 3:21 pm

cRookie_Monster wrote:I'm 99% sure it would have been cheaper to license existing sparsely placed music as part of the package than to commission the creation of new wall to wall music. This is also part of why they don't bother anymore :) That and a host of other reasons.

It was about style, modernizing and Westernizing the score. The Japanese score was seen as being much too sparse and having a very dated sound.
FUNimation can't really modernise a cartoon series done in the 80's / 90's as the animation shows that it's dated. Ultimate Blast cutscenes did look really nice, though.
FUNimation 2015 Releases I want:
- Kai 2.0 on Blu-ray

User avatar
cRookie_Monster
OMG CRAZY REGEN
Posts: 951
Joined: Mon Oct 22, 2007 7:41 pm
Location: Seattle, WA
Contact:

Re: The American Dub Replacement Score Purpose

Post by cRookie_Monster » Thu Nov 08, 2012 3:40 pm

dbboxkaifan wrote:
cRookie_Monster wrote:I'm 99% sure it would have been cheaper to license existing sparsely placed music as part of the package than to commission the creation of new wall to wall music. This is also part of why they don't bother anymore :) That and a host of other reasons.

It was about style, modernizing and Westernizing the score. The Japanese score was seen as being much too sparse and having a very dated sound.
FUNimation can't really modernise a cartoon series done in the 80's / 90's as the animation shows that it's dated. Ultimate Blast cutscenes did look really nice, though.
To American audiences it was completely new. And to us older guys, the original score sounds like music from the 50s. That gap and the sparseness were the real reasons, whether it was the "right thing" or not.

Also we started rescoring DBZ in the 90s...so the "90s" were current back then.
- Scott
http://morganstudios.com

kei17
I Live Here
Posts: 4142
Joined: Wed Dec 05, 2007 9:23 am

Re: The American Dub Replacement Score Purpose

Post by kei17 » Thu Nov 08, 2012 3:54 pm

I guess it would be an overstatement to say that the Kikuchi score sounds like '50s music. To me, it sounds '70-ish instead.

User avatar
cRookie_Monster
OMG CRAZY REGEN
Posts: 951
Joined: Mon Oct 22, 2007 7:41 pm
Location: Seattle, WA
Contact:

Re: The American Dub Replacement Score Purpose

Post by cRookie_Monster » Thu Nov 08, 2012 4:27 pm

kei17 wrote:I guess it would be an overstatement to say that the Kikuchi score sounds like '50s music. To me, it sounds '70-ish instead.
I have an old thread on that with examples:
http://www.kanzenshuu.com/forum/viewtop ... 78#p452778

I think his style sounds *exactly* like old 50's horror movies, throw in some 50's jazzy Mancini and occasional simplified Baroque music and you've nailed his style completely. And of course it makes total sense, since that was the popular style when he was coming of age.

Either way 70s != 80s & 90s
Last edited by cRookie_Monster on Thu Nov 08, 2012 4:37 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- Scott
http://morganstudios.com

User avatar
bkev
I Live Here
Posts: 2534
Joined: Sat Jan 20, 2007 7:17 pm
Location: Twitter. Tweet-Tweet.

Re: The American Dub Replacement Score Purpose

Post by bkev » Thu Nov 08, 2012 4:32 pm

cRookie_Monster wrote:I'm 99% sure it would have been cheaper to license existing sparsely placed music as part of the package than to commission the creation of new wall to wall music. This is also part of why they don't bother anymore :) That and a host of other reasons.

It was about style, modernizing and Westernizing the score. The Japanese score was seen as being much too sparse and having a very dated sound.
Unfortunately it's still a common practice via Saban and, up until recently, 4Kids. Hell, when Disney had Digimon, they did it too... I think (please correct me on this if I'm wrong). It's about money and making it easier for cuts to be made without awkward consequences.
[quote="Brakus"]For all the flack that FUNimation gets on this forum for their quote about DBZ, there's some modicum of truth to it: a 9-year-old is born every day. Or in some cases, "reborn". DBZ may be a kids' show, but it's been so close to so many hearts all over Japan, America, and quite possibly, even the world.[/quote]

kei17
I Live Here
Posts: 4142
Joined: Wed Dec 05, 2007 9:23 am

Re: The American Dub Replacement Score Purpose

Post by kei17 » Thu Nov 08, 2012 4:42 pm

cRookie_Monster wrote:
kei17 wrote:I guess it would be an overstatement to say that the Kikuchi score sounds like '50s music. To me, it sounds '70-ish instead.
I have an old thread on that with examples:
http://www.kanzenshuu.com/forum/viewtop ... 78#p452778

I think his style sounds *exactly* like old 50's horror movies, throw in some 50's jazzy Mancini and occasional simplified Baroque music and you've nailed his style completely. And of course it makes total sense, since that was the popular style when he was coming of age.
Maybe it is that I find it '70s-ish because Kikuchi's music itself was the very '70s TV music in Japan. So many TV shows back then had his music, so it automatically makes the Japanese think of the '70s.

User avatar
cRookie_Monster
OMG CRAZY REGEN
Posts: 951
Joined: Mon Oct 22, 2007 7:41 pm
Location: Seattle, WA
Contact:

Re: The American Dub Replacement Score Purpose

Post by cRookie_Monster » Thu Nov 08, 2012 4:47 pm

bkev wrote:
cRookie_Monster wrote:I'm 99% sure it would have been cheaper to license existing sparsely placed music as part of the package than to commission the creation of new wall to wall music. This is also part of why they don't bother anymore :) That and a host of other reasons.

It was about style, modernizing and Westernizing the score. The Japanese score was seen as being much too sparse and having a very dated sound.
Unfortunately it's still a common practice via Saban and, up until recently, 4Kids. Hell, when Disney had Digimon, they did it too... I think (please correct me on this if I'm wrong). It's about money and making it easier for cuts to be made without awkward consequences.
Well what I am saying comes from my actual conversations with Bruce Faulconer and maybe even Barry Watson...(my conversations with Barry were few and are very hazy in my memory) Maybe Bruce didn't know or maybe I misunderstood. I think Barry, Bruce, myself, and Mike all had similar reactions to the original score's sound. To us it just sounded really old, cheezy, and inappropriate for an American kids'\boy show. What I've now come to appreciate is that the old 50's style is so far back that younger folk now don't even recognize it at all to make that association.
- Scott
http://morganstudios.com

User avatar
dbzfan7
Namekian Warrior
Posts: 13045
Joined: Sat Aug 04, 2012 3:55 am
Location: Earth
Contact:

Re: The American Dub Replacement Score Purpose

Post by dbzfan7 » Fri Nov 09, 2012 9:52 pm

cRookie_Monster wrote:
bkev wrote:
cRookie_Monster wrote:I'm 99% sure it would have been cheaper to license existing sparsely placed music as part of the package than to commission the creation of new wall to wall music. This is also part of why they don't bother anymore :) That and a host of other reasons.

It was about style, modernizing and Westernizing the score. The Japanese score was seen as being much too sparse and having a very dated sound.
Unfortunately it's still a common practice via Saban and, up until recently, 4Kids. Hell, when Disney had Digimon, they did it too... I think (please correct me on this if I'm wrong). It's about money and making it easier for cuts to be made without awkward consequences.
Well what I am saying comes from my actual conversations with Bruce Faulconer and maybe even Barry Watson...(my conversations with Barry were few and are very hazy in my memory) Maybe Bruce didn't know or maybe I misunderstood. I think Barry, Bruce, myself, and Mike all had similar reactions to the original score's sound. To us it just sounded really old, cheezy, and inappropriate for an American kids'\boy show. What I've now come to appreciate is that the old 50's style is so far back that younger folk now don't even recognize it at all to make that association.
But it wasn't an American kid's show, It was a Japanese kids show. I don't see where that angle came from other then marketing.
Why Dragon Ball Consistency in something such as power levels matter!

User avatar
dbzfan7
Namekian Warrior
Posts: 13045
Joined: Sat Aug 04, 2012 3:55 am
Location: Earth
Contact:

Re: The American Dub Replacement Score Purpose

Post by dbzfan7 » Fri Nov 09, 2012 9:52 pm

cRookie_Monster wrote:
bkev wrote:
cRookie_Monster wrote:I'm 99% sure it would have been cheaper to license existing sparsely placed music as part of the package than to commission the creation of new wall to wall music. This is also part of why they don't bother anymore :) That and a host of other reasons.

It was about style, modernizing and Westernizing the score. The Japanese score was seen as being much too sparse and having a very dated sound.

Unfortunately it's still a common practice via Saban and, up until recently, 4Kids. Hell, when Disney had Digimon, they did it too... I think (please correct me on this if I'm wrong). It's about money and making it easier for cuts to be made without awkward consequences.


Well what I am saying comes from my actual conversations with Bruce Faulconer and maybe even Barry Watson...(my conversations with Barry were few and are very hazy in my memory) Maybe Bruce didn't know or maybe I misunderstood. I think Barry, Bruce, myself, and Mike all had similar reactions to the original score's sound. To us it just sounded really old, cheezy, and inappropriate for an American kids'\boy show. What I've now come to appreciate is that the old 50's style is so far back that younger folk now don't even recognize it at all to make that association.


But it wasn't an American kid's show, It was a Japanese kids show. I don't see where that angle came from other then marketing.
Why Dragon Ball Consistency in something such as power levels matter!

User avatar
cRookie_Monster
OMG CRAZY REGEN
Posts: 951
Joined: Mon Oct 22, 2007 7:41 pm
Location: Seattle, WA
Contact:

Re: The American Dub Replacement Score Purpose

Post by cRookie_Monster » Sat Nov 10, 2012 3:42 am

dbzfan7 wrote: But it wasn't an American kid's show, It was a Japanese kids show. I don't see where that angle came from other then marketing.
Yup, that's a marketing decision for a Japanese show in an American market, making it more American so it will sell better/be more popular.

The original question was
So, apparently, from what I understand, DBZ received a replacement score due to licensing/legal issues. Is this even true?
I'm saying, no I don't think it's true.
- Scott
http://morganstudios.com

User avatar
Gonstead
I Live Here
Posts: 3500
Joined: Thu Oct 13, 2011 9:33 am
Location: New Zealand
Contact:

Re: The American Dub Replacement Score Purpose

Post by Gonstead » Sat Nov 10, 2012 4:53 am

Seeing as Funimation was literally not big giant it is now back in the day, I can almost imagine something going along like this.

Toei: Okay, we'll give you This, this and this for *insert amount of money here*
Funi: Whoah there, we can't afford that! Can you maybe sell us just the video and SFX?
Toei: Hmm... alright I'll sell you this and this for *insert amount of money here*
Funi: Done and done! *shakes*

Of course though, the more likely events that happened were that they did in fact receive all the materials for the show (Voiceless Video, SFX and Music film reels) but decided ultimately that they would have made more money by not paying royalties for the music and instead hire to create their own brand of music to go along with the thing of "Americanizing" a foreign show since it was still a common thing to do back in those days.

The thing is though, unless the company or the original creator is heavily involved in the final result (Hayao Miyazaki as an example), they literally will not care enough what another company will do with their material so long as it still makes money for them in the end.
Visit DragonBallFigures for all your Dragon Ball figure info and needs!
Mayuri Kurotsuchi wrote:"In this world, nothing perfect exists. It may be a cliche after all but it's the way things are. That's precisely why ordinary men pursue the concept of perfection, it's infatuation. But ultimately I have to ask myself "What is the true meaning of being perfect?" and the answer I came up with was nothing. Not one thing. The truth of the matter is I despise perfection! If something is truly perfect, that's IT! The bottom line becomes there is no room for imagination! No space for intelligence or ability or improvement! Do you understand? To men of science like us, perfection is a dead end, a condition of hopelessness. Always strive to be better than anything that came before you but not perfect! Scientist's agonize over the attempt to achieve perfection! That's the kind of creatures we are! We take joy in trying to exceed our grasp, in trying to reach for something that in the end, we have to admit may in fact be unreachable!"
MY HOLY GRAIL (110% Serious. Please sell me one)

User avatar
penguintruth
Banned
Posts: 4861
Joined: Wed Sep 02, 2009 5:49 pm

Re: The American Dub Replacement Score Purpose

Post by penguintruth » Sun Nov 11, 2012 12:19 pm

[please delete]
Last edited by penguintruth on Sun Nov 11, 2012 12:22 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Kentai wrote:Son Gokuu is a fascinating character anyway, because he is - at face value, anyway - an idiot savant. The victim of violent head trauma as an infant [...] he's a simple bumpkin with a fair share of brain damage who's natural talents to work out what's wrong compensate for his broad lack of common sense. But he's also a fighter, through and through [...] he fight until he has, in no uncertain terms, beaten his enemy on terms they can both acknowledge. He doesn't want to kill anyone, or even prove that he can win... he just wants to know he can. He's an ineffably charming bastard who's manly leanings were really incendental, and yes, the fact that he was voiced by a squeaky woman made the combination perhaps all the more charming.


Dragon Ball (Z) Kai Reviews!

Can I get a Schemen?

User avatar
penguintruth
Banned
Posts: 4861
Joined: Wed Sep 02, 2009 5:49 pm

Re: The American Dub Replacement Score Purpose

Post by penguintruth » Sun Nov 11, 2012 12:22 pm

Whether they thought it sounded dated or not, it wasn't their place to replace the music. Toei never should have given them permission to take the beautiful orchestral score and replace it with synth-rock-new-age bullshit. Funimation's unmitigated arrogance in those days still baffles me.
Kentai wrote:Son Gokuu is a fascinating character anyway, because he is - at face value, anyway - an idiot savant. The victim of violent head trauma as an infant [...] he's a simple bumpkin with a fair share of brain damage who's natural talents to work out what's wrong compensate for his broad lack of common sense. But he's also a fighter, through and through [...] he fight until he has, in no uncertain terms, beaten his enemy on terms they can both acknowledge. He doesn't want to kill anyone, or even prove that he can win... he just wants to know he can. He's an ineffably charming bastard who's manly leanings were really incendental, and yes, the fact that he was voiced by a squeaky woman made the combination perhaps all the more charming.


Dragon Ball (Z) Kai Reviews!

Can I get a Schemen?

dbret12
Newbie
Posts: 48
Joined: Thu May 31, 2012 9:34 pm

Re: The American Dub Replacement Score Purpose

Post by dbret12 » Sun Nov 11, 2012 11:05 pm

I kinda hated a bit of the acting in FUNimation's original dub of the Ginyu and Freeza Sagas, but I didn't mind Faulconer's music. However, I'd probably change my mind if I saw the Japanese version.

matt0044
Advanced Regular
Posts: 1155
Joined: Sat Feb 04, 2012 12:54 pm

Re: The American Dub Replacement Score Purpose

Post by matt0044 » Mon Nov 12, 2012 12:41 pm

penguintruth wrote:Whether they thought it sounded dated or not, it wasn't their place to replace the music. Toei never should have given them permission to take the beautiful orchestral score and replace it with synth-rock-new-age bullshit. Funimation's unmitigated arrogance in those days still baffles me.
Ahhhhhh, humble beginnings can be hard to look back on, huh?

User avatar
cRookie_Monster
OMG CRAZY REGEN
Posts: 951
Joined: Mon Oct 22, 2007 7:41 pm
Location: Seattle, WA
Contact:

Re: The American Dub Replacement Score Purpose

Post by cRookie_Monster » Wed Nov 14, 2012 4:19 am

Gozar just brought up a good point over in a different thread:
http://www.kanzenshuu.com/forum/viewtop ... 16#p591072

Basically there was a time when it seemed *noone* knew that DBZ was a Japanese cartoon in the first place. Even today I sometimes have trouble explaining where the show came from.

Again, reasons being right or wrong....just trying to answer the question.
- Scott
http://morganstudios.com

User avatar
linkdude20002001
I Live Here
Posts: 2613
Joined: Fri Jul 22, 2005 4:22 pm
Location: Marysville, Washington

Re: The American Dub Replacement Score Purpose

Post by linkdude20002001 » Wed Nov 14, 2012 4:22 pm

We had the internet, so I don't see how that's even possible. I was in the Fourth Grade in 1998, and I ALWAYS knew DBZ and Sailor Moon were Japanese cartoons.
The Many English Dubs of DB, DBZ, and DBGT
Viz Release Censorship Guide

Scsigs: "Y'know, it actually makes sense that they waited till today to announce [the 30th Anniversary] set. It's Akira Toriyama's birthday."
Shaddy: "I too want my legacy destroyed as a birthday gift."

Post Reply