Shunsuke Kikuchi (菊池 俊辅 Kikuchi Shunsuke) is a Japanese musician and composer.
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- Shunsuke Kikuchi
- Shunsuke Kikuchi
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| - thumb|Shunsuke Kikuchi Shunsuke Kikuchi (菊池 俊 辅) (nacido el 1 de noviembre de 1931, en Hirosaki, Prefectura de Aomori) es un prolífico compositor japonés. Se especializa en la música incidental para los medios de comunicación como la televisión y el cine.
- Curieusement, Toei/Colombia n'a jamais sorti au Japon l'intégralité de ses travaux autour de Dragon Ball, c'est notamment le cas pour le fameux thème de Tapion pour ne citer que lui. En France, des problèmes de droits empêchent les musiques de Shunsuke Kikuchi d'être utilisables dans les jeux vidéo de Bandai Namco
- Shunsuke Kikuchi (菊池 俊辅 Kikuchi Shunsuke) is a Japanese musician and composer.
- Shunsuke Kikuchi(菊池 俊輔Kikuchi Shunsuke, born November 1, 1931) is a prolific Japanese composer from Hirosaki. He specializes in incidental music for media such as television and film. Active since the early 60s, he has been one of Japan's most highly demanded film and TV composers, working principally on tokusatsu and anime productions for children, as well as violent action films, jidaigeki and dorama. His works are comparatively more common in Toei-related productions. As of 2006, he is still active.
- Shunsuke Kikuchi created the soundtrack for the original Japanese Dr. Slump and Arale-chan, Dragon Ball and Dragon Ball Z series. He retired soon after the end of Dragon Ball Z, and was thus replaced by Akihito Tokunaga for Dragon Ball GT. One of his music pieces was re-used on Dragon Ball Kai in March 2011, due to the controversial firing of Kenji Yamamoto by Toei Animation after allegations of the plagiarized work. It played on the final two Dragon Ball Kai episodes that aired on TV (episode 96 and episode 97), in the same month.
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| - Various Kamen Rider season
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Name
| - Shunsuke Kikuchi
- Kikuchi, Shunsuke
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| - Shunsuke Kikuchi(菊池 俊輔Kikuchi Shunsuke, born November 1, 1931) is a prolific Japanese composer from Hirosaki. He specializes in incidental music for media such as television and film. Active since the early 60s, he has been one of Japan's most highly demanded film and TV composers, working principally on tokusatsu and anime productions for children, as well as violent action films, jidaigeki and dorama. His works are comparatively more common in Toei-related productions. As of 2006, he is still active. Kikuchi's compositions characteristically have a 16-beat blues and pentatonic basis. Up-tempo works like those in Kamen Rider and Abarenbo Shogun form the majority of his works, while the 12/8 theme of Doraemon and the slow background music from long-running series have become some of his best-known works. As anime and tokusatsu like Doraemon, Kamen Rider, Dragon Ball, Dragon Ball Z, jidaigeki such as Abarenbo Shogun and Chōshichirō Edo Nikki, and TBS Saturday-night productions ranging from Key Hunter to G-Men '75 became long-running hit series, people began to say that "if Kikuchi Shunsuke is in charge of the music, the show will be a hit."
- thumb|Shunsuke Kikuchi Shunsuke Kikuchi (菊池 俊 辅) (nacido el 1 de noviembre de 1931, en Hirosaki, Prefectura de Aomori) es un prolífico compositor japonés. Se especializa en la música incidental para los medios de comunicación como la televisión y el cine.
- Curieusement, Toei/Colombia n'a jamais sorti au Japon l'intégralité de ses travaux autour de Dragon Ball, c'est notamment le cas pour le fameux thème de Tapion pour ne citer que lui. En France, des problèmes de droits empêchent les musiques de Shunsuke Kikuchi d'être utilisables dans les jeux vidéo de Bandai Namco
- Shunsuke Kikuchi (菊池 俊辅 Kikuchi Shunsuke) is a Japanese musician and composer.
- Shunsuke Kikuchi created the soundtrack for the original Japanese Dr. Slump and Arale-chan, Dragon Ball and Dragon Ball Z series. He retired soon after the end of Dragon Ball Z, and was thus replaced by Akihito Tokunaga for Dragon Ball GT. One of his music pieces was re-used on Dragon Ball Kai in March 2011, due to the controversial firing of Kenji Yamamoto by Toei Animation after allegations of the plagiarized work. It played on the final two Dragon Ball Kai episodes that aired on TV (episode 96 and episode 97), in the same month. Kikuchi's compositions characteristically have a 16-beat blues and pentatonic basis. Up-tempo works like those in Kamen Rider and Abarenbō Shōgun form the majority of his works, while the 12/8 theme of Doraemon and the slow background music from long-running series have become some of his best-known works. As of 2012, Shunsuke Kikuchi is still active.
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