Which Dragon Ball composers would "mix"?
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Which Dragon Ball composers would "mix"?
By mix, I mean music from different composers could be used in the same series or episode without sounding wrong to someone who is unfamiliar with the music in question. No matter how well the styles blend it would probably be jarring to those who are intimately familiar with the pieces.
Kikuchi I think stands alone as having a very distinctive style. Try to put Kikuchi tracks alongside Yamamoto, Sumimoto, anything else and they'll stick out like a sore thumb.
The Faulconer, Johnson and Levi scores could all be used together fairly seamlessly. I really don't think many people would hear a score made up of the three and think "there are pieces from three different composers here".
If done right, the Yamamoto and Sumimoto could possibly blend into a single soundtrack with it being noticeable. Maybe Tokunaga could mix with those pretty well too.
What are your thoughts on this?
Kikuchi I think stands alone as having a very distinctive style. Try to put Kikuchi tracks alongside Yamamoto, Sumimoto, anything else and they'll stick out like a sore thumb.
The Faulconer, Johnson and Levi scores could all be used together fairly seamlessly. I really don't think many people would hear a score made up of the three and think "there are pieces from three different composers here".
If done right, the Yamamoto and Sumimoto could possibly blend into a single soundtrack with it being noticeable. Maybe Tokunaga could mix with those pretty well too.
What are your thoughts on this?
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Re: Which Dragon Ball composers would "mix"?
Hmm, Kikuchi is this old school Japanese composer... He would probably mix great with Seiji Yokoyama (RIP sadly) who did outstanding work on Super Sentai, Captain Harlock and Saint Seiya series.
Kikuchi did Sentai shows as well, but these two are really distinctive still, with Kikuchi having this really old movie, wushu and western style and Yokoyama did lot of orchestral and Wagnerian epic works.
From these oldschool composers, Kohei Tanaka that does One Piece is simmilar and does good job or Toshihiko Sahashi (Gundam Seed, Hunter X Hunter), who does OK job by stepping over Yokoyama in recent Saint Seiya series. Naruto as well has distinct and cool soundtrack.
Sadly, no other DB composers mixes for me. I think that Akihito Tokunaga had great and interesting soundtrack for Dragon Ball GT.
Sadly, Sumitomo for me is pretty bland and uninteresting even as his work got better in later Super arcs.
To answer the question, I think that it is impossible to mix them. For me, Kenji Yamamoto got closest to the spirit of the show and Kikuchi.
Kikuchi did Sentai shows as well, but these two are really distinctive still, with Kikuchi having this really old movie, wushu and western style and Yokoyama did lot of orchestral and Wagnerian epic works.
From these oldschool composers, Kohei Tanaka that does One Piece is simmilar and does good job or Toshihiko Sahashi (Gundam Seed, Hunter X Hunter), who does OK job by stepping over Yokoyama in recent Saint Seiya series. Naruto as well has distinct and cool soundtrack.
Sadly, no other DB composers mixes for me. I think that Akihito Tokunaga had great and interesting soundtrack for Dragon Ball GT.
Sadly, Sumitomo for me is pretty bland and uninteresting even as his work got better in later Super arcs.
To answer the question, I think that it is impossible to mix them. For me, Kenji Yamamoto got closest to the spirit of the show and Kikuchi.
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Re: Which Dragon Ball composers would "mix"?
Sumitomo and yamamoto could work nicely
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Re: Which Dragon Ball composers would "mix"?
Shunsuke Kikuchi and Akihito Tokunaga would go along really well. Sumitomo and Faulconer, both of these are eh and meh, and a mixture of the two could perhaps make their music more bearable to listen to.
Re: Which Dragon Ball composers would "mix"?
I could see Sumimoto and Faulconer working actually. Weird thing is I can also see Sumimoto and Yamamoto going together but not Yamamoto and Faulconer. Maybe it is because Sumimoto is so un-distinctive.JohnnyCashKami wrote:Shunsuke Kikuchi and Akihito Tokunaga would go along really well. Sumitomo and Faulconer, both of these are eh and meh, and a mixture of the two could perhaps make their music more bearable to listen to.
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Re: Which Dragon Ball composers would "mix"?
I think Sumitomo and Faulconer both have the same problem of having some really stand-out great tracks, but the majority of their scores being made up of the forgettable filler tracks they had to fill out the rest of their soundtracks with...
So, combine those and use the best tracks of each composer, and I think you could have something really neat; they have a fairly similar sound to them in general, so... It could work.
Only potential issue there is that the Faulconer tracks' production was a bit iffy in places in terms of the instrument sounds being very MIDI-ish.
So, combine those and use the best tracks of each composer, and I think you could have something really neat; they have a fairly similar sound to them in general, so... It could work.
Only potential issue there is that the Faulconer tracks' production was a bit iffy in places in terms of the instrument sounds being very MIDI-ish.
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