PAGE TOP

3,759 Posts & 2,351 Pages Documenting Dragon Ball, since 1998. We've got you covered!
Published by 10 March 2011, 9:01 AM ESTComment

Something we have talked (and joked) about for years has been the blatant plagiarism from Kenji Yamamoto in various bits of music for the franchise. Some pieces have taken inspiration, but others have been flat-out “stolen” — examples such as Cell’s theme from Super Butōden 2on the Super Famicom (Pink Floyd’s “One of These Days”) and “Battle Point Unlimited” from Dragon Ball Z TV Episode 120 (Propaganda’s “The Murder of Love”, among other of their songs) come to mind.

From its inception, there have been “copying” allegations from fans about Yamamoto’s score for Dragon Ball Kai, his first foray into solely scoring a TV adaptation of the series (previously only having composed and arranged additional vocal songs while Shunsuke Kikuchi handled BGM composition for the Dragon Ball and Dragon Ball Z TV series, as well as scoring various video games).

Our buddy kei17 noted for us that Toei has finally acknowledged this practice, specifically with regard to Dragon Ball Kai. In an official statement posted on their website yesterday, Toei noted (thanks to Rachel for the translation):

この度、当社が製作したテレビアニメーション作品「ドラゴンボール改」に収録された音楽著作物の中に、第三者の権利への抵触の可能性が疑われる楽曲が複数存在することが判明いたしました。当該楽曲は「ドラゴンボール改」の背景音楽として使用されており、とり急ぎ、「ドラゴンボール改」の背景音楽から当該楽曲を差し替える措置を講じております。

また、事実関係の迅速な調査と今後の対応策に関する関係者との協議を進めております。

The existence of multiple suspicious musical pieces which may infringe on the rights of third parties has been confirmed within the musical compositions recorded for “Dragon Ball Kai”, an animated television work produced by this firm. The relevant musical pieces are used as background music in “Dragon Ball Kai”, and measures are promptly being taken to replace the relevant musical pieces from the background music of “Dragon Ball Kai”.

Also, we are proceeding with a swift investigation of the facts, and discussion of countermeasures with concerned parties in the near future.

The most likely culprits, in our opinion, are the BGM tracks named “The Ebb and The Flow” and “A New Foe Rears His Head” which are essentially the tracks “War” by James Horner from the Avatar score and the Terminator Salvation opening theme by Danny Elfman, respectively. Both of these pieces were included on Dragon Ball Kai Soundtrack III & Songs and are used in the series beginning in the “Artificial Humans & Cell arc” around the time that Trunks appears (coincidentally, just about where the television broadcast of the English dub happens to be these days). Keep in mind that Toei themselves have not actually named specific pieces of music, so while this is not quite “speculation” or “rumor”, it should be held in check.

kei17 noted that some Japanese fans are reporting that music in subsequent broadcasts of the show in Japan are already being replaced, and while we have been unable to confirm this ourselves, has possibly been done with music from the original Shunsuke Kikuchi score from Dragon Ball Z.

Fallout from this has been years in the making, and it will be fascinating to see how this is handled. This would seemingly explain why the fourth soundtrack collection for the “refreshed” TV series was canceled for a second time, though it questionable whether or not it has affected the continuation of the series, which we appears to be coming to an end this month.

UPDATE: Well, this clinches it — Toei’s official website for DragonBall Kai (as well as Fuji TV’s own site) now solely list Shunsuke Kikuchi as staff under “Music”:

More on this as it comes in!

Published by 07 March 2011, 9:10 PM ESTComment

An unforeseen sickness led to an impromptu, completely different episode this week… but that never means we are short on material to cover! Much like our news update from last week, this podcast episode we cover the raw facts of what appears to be the imminent end of Dragon Ball Kai before dipping into a couple quick reviews. Download the show now, or head on over to the podcast page for more information or to subscribe.

SHOW DESCRIPTION:
Episode #0250! VegettoEX and Meri briefly cover the raw facts surrounding the upcoming end of “DragonBall Kai” before digging into some quick reviews. Bakuman gets a DBZ cover song, the “Legend of Saiyan” figures pick up right where “Freeza’s Force” left off, and “Ultimate Butoden” is the best DBZ video game you’re not playing. To celebrate 250 podcast episodes, we are also giving away a copy of the fourth daizenshuu!

REFERENCED SITES:

Published by 03 March 2011, 9:12 AM ESTComment

I feel like I have to preface this news by stating that we here at the site have no particularly strong opinions any which way on what the future may be for Dragon Ball Kai. It is not an adaptation we particularly loved, but it was quasi-new, brought a fresh group of fans in, gave us more material to talk about, etc.

That all being said, we have been closely following its performance, especially in Japan. From the exponential drop in sales figures, merchandise branding, Toriko taking its time slot next month, and everything in between, it has been a fascinating ride — a ride that is likely over. All we have had to go on up until now has been speculation and a few educated guesses, but now it seems as if confirmation is getting out there that Dragon Ball Kai is over.

Our Japanese buddy kei17 posted up a page from the magazine TV Pia on our forum that contained a short interview with Takeshi Kusao, the voice actor for Trunks:

In addition to some minor tidbits about how he went about doing the synchronized voices with Masako Nozawa for Gotenks in the past and how much he learned from her (such as ad-libbing breathing that was not in the script), the article provided two very significant items:

(1) Takeshi Kusao notes that he hopes, if there is an opportunity, that they can also remake the Majin Boo story arc

(2) The article specifically notes that there are only four episodes of Dragon Ball Kai left

There you have it, folks — four episodes puts us right in the ball park to be ending with Episode 98 (the end of the “Artificial Humans & Cell arc”) on 27 March 2011. This is the first we are seeing with someone involved with the series’ production actively stating that it is coming to a close, and I expect that while we may see more, information will likely be limited and vague. Will they return to do the Majin Boo arc at some point later down the road? What does this mean for the international licensees? Any fallout from this turn of events is likely only just beginning.

Published by 02 March 2011, 9:42 AM ESTComment

We recently noted that FUNimation would be dropping the prices on their Dragon Ball Kai home releases, and it seems that the drop is coming earlier than expected. RightStuf has announced that the price drop on all four available sets has already gone into effect — MSRP is now $29.98 on DVD, and $34.98 on Blu-ray. We recommend you go with those Dragon Box sets before anything else, but if you are already going in on Kai, you can at least rest easy saving some money.

Published by 02 March 2011, 9:41 AM ESTComment

After all of the inconsistent details, canceled releases, new catalog numbers, and wild speculation… we finally have some concrete information (we think…?) on this month’s upcoming two-disc Dragon Ball Kai Original Soundtrack Collection (previously listed as Soundtrack IV), courtesy of CDJapan’s posted track listing.

As we began to fear, it is mostly a collection of previously-released material, with the tiniest amount of unreleased music — by “tiniest amount”, we mean approximately six tracks (of 76 total). Yes, you read that correctly: six. We say “approximately” because some of the given names are a little ambiguous; they may be the same versions as previously-released music (but with an extra word in the title), or they may be as-of-yet unreleased, stripped-down versions of those songs. Regardless, we are absolutely looking at a single-digit number in terms of new tracks. The rest of the material comes from the prior three soundtracks for the series.

Our buddy kenisu3000 thinks that one of the new tracks is the (woefully underwhelming) piece used recently for Gohan’s Super Saiyan 2 transformation, so hey… that is something.

Published by 28 February 2011, 8:23 PM ESTComment

Sure, KaiserNeko from TeamFourStar stops by to be a pretty face and help get the show going, but the real meat this week is an in-depth crash course in Journey to the West, the Chinese story which served as the initial inspiration for Dragon Ball:

First up, our buddy Herms details the influences in the earliest parts of the DragonBall story, then turns to the very end of the first TV series with the character of Annin. The Taoist philosopher named Lao Tzu makes a disguise appearance, and contraptions meant to seal away the Handsome Monkey King are put to use.

I then bring you all the way back to Episode 79 of the first TV series with two characters named “Ginkaku” (Silver Horn) and “Kinkaku” (Golden Horn), themselves and their magical gourd a direct reference to and re-telling of a story from Journey to the West:

Download the show now, or head on over to the podcast page for more information or to subscribe. We also have the inspiration for the podcast episode detailed on our forum. I have no doubt that many of you will want to run out and purchase a translation of the original story after listening!

SHOW DESCRIPTION:
Episode #0249! VegettoEX and KaiserNeko cover the mostly non-news and March’s releases. Herms joins to give an in-depth crash course in “Journey to the West”, the Chinese story which served as the initial inspiration for “DragonBall”. Two stories from the first TV series directly reference characters and items from its inspiration, and in ways you may never have known!

REFERENCED SITES:

Published by 22 February 2011, 10:10 AM ESTComment

The full track listing has been revealed for this week’s Dragon Ball Kai: Complete Song Collection, so we have added that in to its respective section in our “Music Guide”.

Next up is another head-scratcher. The so-called Dragon Ball Kai: Original Soundtrack IV has a fun little release schedule going on, and its cover art really is not helping:

The disc’s title seems to be in flux if you look around retailer sites, but the cover art seems to finalize it as Dragon Ball Kai: Original Soundtrack Shū (the same shū from daizenshuu, meaning “collection”) — the number four is nowhere to be seen. So what on Earth is this going to be? Will it truly be music from the series that has not yet made its way to CD, or like this week’s Complete Song Collection and its vocal tracks, will this be a last-gasp collection of previously-released material?

Published by 21 February 2011, 8:14 PM ESTComment

Beyond catching up on two weeks worth of news, we have a bunch of short segments for all you podcast listeners this time around. Our buddy and forum moderator Kaboom jumped on to talk a little bit about a little project some folks have been contributing to: splicing together a more complete view of the Saiyan history, in particular with the Bardock TV special. I also finally got in my copy of Dragon Ball Kai: Ultimate Butōden, so some initial thoughts on the game help flesh out the show (spoilers: it is pretty good). All your regular releases and e-mails round things out this time around. Download the show now, or head on over to the podcast page for more information or to subscribe.

SHOW DESCRIPTION:
Episode #0248! VegettoEX and Julian cover all the latest news, from crazy release schedules to new prices to online streaming and beyond. Kaboom stops by to talk about an on-going fan project to beef up the Bardock TV special, and we give a short first-look at “Ultimate Butoden” for the Japanese Nintendo DS. Releases, e-mails, and a look back at Internet past rounds out the episode.

REFERENCED SITES: