Dragon Ball Z | Rock The Dragon Remake (Levy, Saban, Wasserman, Johnson) | By Gladius

Описание к видео Dragon Ball Z | Rock The Dragon Remake (Levy, Saban, Wasserman, Johnson) | By Gladius

Thank you to ‪@raypar4391‬ (I'm sorry it took so long mate) , ‪@inner_light5754‬ , @AllMediaAlchemy , ‪@destraucght1242‬ , ‪@sammyfromdiscord‬ , ‪@htownsultimate7245‬ for this suggestion.

To this day, we aren't 100% sure who composed & performed "Rock The Dragon". It is said that Jeremy Sweet did the vocals, but we aren’t clear on who actually wrote/produced it. I copy and pasted this from Dragon Ball Wiki:

On Dragon Ball Z: Original USA Television Soundtrack, the composers are listed as being Shuki Levy (the head of Saban Entertainment's music department) and Haim Saban, under the alias Kussa Mahehi. The original dub of Dragon Ball Z's first two seasons, which ran in syndication between September 1996 and May 1998, also listed Levy and Mahehi as the composers in the end credits.

Saban Entertainment musician Jeremy Sweet sung the song, despite him only being listed as a music producer in the credits. Sweet is known for creating various Power Rangers theme songs for Saban in the late 1990s and early 2000s, where he often went uncredited. Many believe that Ron Wasserman, who did the first Power Rangers theme and the 1990s X-Men theme, was also involved with the song in an uncredited capacity due to his association with Saban. Wasserman is listed alongside Sweet as a music producer in the credits, but has denied having any involvement with "Rock the Dragon", stating that he only did the background music for Funimation and Saban's edited dub of the first two Dragon Ball Z seasons. In a 2017 interview he said, "First of all in Dragon Ball Z with “Rock the Dragon” that isn’t me, I know a lot of people think it is. What I did is the score for the first couple years [and] that was handed to me after I left Saban by Saban because they said, 'Look here is a show we don’t really care about, so If you just want to score it at home, score it.' So it was an easy gig and I got to do whatever I wanted, so I went with this really heavy, weird stuff." However, Wasserman's background score for the episodes still had certain instrumental musical cues which were modeled after "Rock the Dragon".

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#dragonballz #rockthedragon

DISCLAIMER: This video features covers, remixes, remakes, and rearrangements of the soundtracks from Dragon Ball, Dragon Ball Z, and Dragon Ball Super. Please note that all rights to the original compositions and sound recordings belong to their respective owners, including but not limited to Toei Animation, Shueisha, and their affiliated companies.

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