DRAGON BALL MUSIC LIBRARY
This is an update of the previous collection, now extended and reorganised.
Since it is impossible to keep track of exactly who did what for each and every file, I will only indicate the ones that were ripped by me and whose quality I can thus guarantee. For the rest, you may find more details in the metadata, in the included text files, in the Readme.txt file from the previous batch, or in other places, though many times no information is available. As for scans, most were gathered from multiple sources (I scanned the covers and little else, but only when I didn’t find anything that I thought was good enough).
Of course, there will always be new Dragon Ball music being created, and there can always appear a better quality rip of this or that soundtrack, or better and/or more complete scans, but my work with this project ends here.
Keep this torrent alive and healthy for as long as possible!
Contents
I. Audio CDs
Everything here (except for the Big Box cassette tape) was losslessly extracted by me from official physical discs.
Dragon Ball Z Hit Song Collection
- Dragon Ball Z Hit Kyokushū
- Dragon Ball Z Hit Kyokushū 2 – Miracle ZENKAI Power!!
- Dragon Ball Z Hit Kyokushū 3 – Space Dancing
- Dragon Ball Z Hit Kyokushū 4 – Characters Special
- Dragon Ball Z Hit Kyokushū 5 – Hikari no Tabi
- Dragon Ball Z Hit Kyokushū 6 – Battle Point Unlimited
- Dragon Ball Z Hit Kyokushū 7 – The Journey of the 7 Balls
- Dragon Ball Z Hit Kyokushū 8 – Characters Special 2
- Dragon Ball Z Hit Kyokushū 8 ½ – Special
- Dragon Ball Z Hit Kyokushū 9 – Future Shock!!
- Dragon Ball Z Hit Kyokushū 10 – Virtual Triangle
- Dragon Ball Z Hit Kyokushū 11 – «Seishin to Toki» no Heya
- Dragon Ball Z Hit Kyokushū 12 – DBZ a Go Go!!
- Dragon Ball Z Hit Kyokushū 13 – Battle & Hope
- Dragon Ball Z Hit Kyokushū 14 – Straight
- Dragon Ball Z Hit Kyokushū 15 – Sunlight & City Lights
- Dragon Ball Z Hit Kyokushū 16 – WE GOTTA POWER
- Dragon Ball Z Hit Kyokushū 17 – Hippy Hoppy Shake!!
- Dragon Ball Z Hit Kyokushū 18 – Mirai e no Sanka
- Dragon Ball Z Hit Kyokushū 18 ½ – Special Super Remix
- Dragon Ball Z Hit Kyokushū Best – Never Ending Story
CD sets
- Dragon Ball & Dragon Ball Z Daizenshuu
- Dragon Ball Z BGM Collection
- Dragon Ball Z – Best Song Collection “Legend of Dragonworld”
- Dragon Ball Z Complete Song Collection Box
- 30th Anime Anniversary – Dragon Ball Kami Best
Films
- Dragon Ball Z Ongakushū – Volume 1
- Dragon Ball Z Ongakushū – Volume 2
- Dragon Ball Z – Kiken na Futari! Sūpā Senshi wa Nemurenai – Music Collection
- Dragon Ball Z – Sūpā Senshi Gekiha!! Katsu No wa Ore da – Music Collection
- Dragon Ball – Saikyō e no Michi – Original Soundtrack
- Dragon Ball Z – Battle Of Gods – Original Sound Track
- Dragon Ball Z – Fukkatsu no «F» – Original Sound Track
Dragon Ball Kai
- Dragon Ball Kai Original Soundtrack
- Dragon Ball Kai Original Soundtrack II
- Dragon Ball Kai Original Soundtrack III & Songs
- Dragon Ball Kai Complete Song Collection
Games
- Dragon Ball Z Gaiden – Saiya-jin Zetsumetsu Keikaku
- Dragon Ball Z – Super Butōden
- Dragon Ball Z – Super Butōden 2
- Dragon Ball Z – Super Butōden 3
- Dragon Ball Z – Chō Gokū Den
- Dragon Ball Z Game Music – Kakusei-hen
- Dragon Ball Z Game Music – Saisei-hen
- Dragon Ball Z – Ultimate Battle 22
- Dragon Ball Z – Idainaru Doragon Bōru Densetsu
- Dragon Ball – Final Bout
- Dragon Ball Z & Dragon Ball Z 2
- Dragon Ball Z 3
- Dragon Ball Z – Burst Limit
- Dragon Ball Z – Infinite World
- Dragon Ball – Raging Blast
- Dragon Ball – Raging Blast 2
- Dragon Ball – Xenoverse 2
Miscellaneous
- Dragon Ball – Zenkyokushū
- Dragon Ball Z – Book’n CD Series
- Digital Dragon Ball – The World
- Dragon Power ∞ – Single+1 Series
- Dragon Ball Z – Sūpā Senshi Gekiha!! Katsu No wa Ore da
- Dragon Ball Z – Big Box
- Dragon Ball Z – Music Fantasy
- Dragon Ball Z – The Best Selections
- Dragon '98 Special Live
- Dragon Ball Zenkyokushū
- Dragon Ball Ongakushū
- Makafushigi Adventure! (2005 Version)
- CHA-LA HEAD-CHA-LA (2005 Version)
- Dragon Ball Z – Best Remix 2006 ½ Special
- Dragon Ball Z 20th Century – Songs Best
Singles
- Makafushigi Adventure!
- CHA-LA HEAD-CHA-LA
- WE GOTTA POWER
- Kiseki no Big Fight
- Dragon Power Mugendai
- Saikyō no Fusion
- Ore ga Yaranakya Dare ga Yaru
- DAN DAN Kokoro Hikarete’ku
- Hitori ja Nai
- Don’t you see!
- Blue Velvet
- Sabitsuita Machine Gun de Ima wo Uchinukō
- Ore wa Tokoton Tomaranai!!
- Super Survivor
- Hikari no Sasu Mirai e!
- Power Of Dreamer
- Progression
- Battle of Omega
II. Video Game Music
Music directly extracted from video games. Only the Dokkan Battle music and the AVI and FLAC files from Ultimate Battle 22, Idainaru Dragon Ball Densetsu, and Final Bout were done by me.
Dragon Ball Games
- Dragon Ball - Shenlong no Nazo (1986)
- Dragon Ball - Daimao Fukkatsu (1988)
- Dragon Ball 3 - Goku Den (1989)
- Dragon Ball Z - Kyoshu! Saiya-jin (1990)
- Dragon Ball Z II - Gekishin Furiza!! (1991)
- Dragon Ball Z - Super Saiya Densetsu (1992)
- Dragon Ball Z III - Ressen Jinzoningen (1992)
- Dragon Ball Z - Gekito Tenkaichi Budokai (1992)
- Dragon Ball Z - Super Butoden (1993)
- Dragon Ball Z (1993)
- Dragon Ball Z Gaiden - Saiya-jin Zetsumetsu Keikaku (1993)
- Dragon Ball Z - Super Butoden 2 (1993)
- Dragon Ball Z - Buyu Retsuden (1994)
- Dragon Ball Z - V.R.V.S. (1994)
- Dragon Ball Z - Super Butoden 3 (1994)
- Dragon Ball Z 2 - Super Battle (1994)
- Dragon Ball Z - Goku Hishoden (1994)
- Dragon Ball Z - Idainaru Son Goku Densetsu (1994)
- Dragon Ball Z - Cho Goku Den (1995)
- Dragon Ball Z - Ultimate Battle 22 (1995)
- Dragon Ball Z - Goku Gekitoden (1995)
- Dragon Ball Z - Shin Butoden (1995)
- Dragon Ball Z - Hyper Dimension (1996)
- Dragon Ball Z - Idainaru Dragon Ball Densetsu (1996)
- Dragon Ball - Final Bout (1997)
- Dragon Ball Z - Densetsu no Cho Senshi-tachi (2002)
- Dragon Ball Z - The Legacy of Goku (2002)
- Dragon Ball Z (2002)
- Dragon Ball Z - The Legacy of Goku II (2003)
- Dragon Ball Z 2 (2003)
- Dragon Ball Z - Taiketsu (2003)
- Dragon Ball 3 - Goku Den (2003)
- Dragon Ball - Advanced Adventure (2004)
- Dragon Ball Z - Buku Togeki (2004)
- Dragon Ball Z 3 (2004)
- Dragon Ball Z - Buu’s Fury (2004)
- Dragon Ball Z - Sagas (2005)
- Dragon Ball Z - Sparking! (2005)
- Dragon Ball GT - Transformation (2005)
- Dragon Ball Z - Buku Ressen (2005)
- Super Dragon Ball Z (2005)
- Dragon Ball Z - Shin Budokai (2006)
- Dragon Ball Z - Sparking! Neo (2006)
- Dragon Ball Z - Shin Budokai 2 (2007)
- Dragon Ball Z - Sparking! Meteor (2007)
- Dragon Ball Z - Harukanaru Goku Densetsu (2007)
- Dragon Ball Z - Burst Limit (2008)
- Dragon Ball Z - Infinite World (2008)
- Dragon Ball DS (2008)
- Dragon Ball Kai - Saiya-jin Raishu (2009)
- Dragonball Evolution (2009)
- Dragon Ball - Tenkaichi Daiboken (2009)
- Dragon Ball - Raging Blast (2009)
- Dragon Ball - Tag VS (2010)
- Dragon Ball DS 2 - Totsugeki! Reddo Ribon Gun (2010)
- Dragon Ball - Raging Blast 2 (2010)
- Dragon Ball Online (2010)
- Dragon Ball Heroes (2011)
- Dragon Ball Kai - Ultimate Butoden (2011)
- Dragon Ball - Ultimate Blast (2011)
- Dragon Ball Z for Kinect (2012)
- Dragon Ball Z - Budokai HD Collection (2012)
- Dragon Ball Heroes - Ultimate Mission (2013)
- Dragon Ball - Tap Battle (2013)
- Dragon Ball Heroes - Ultimate Mission 2 (2014)
- Dragon Ball Z - Battle of Z (2014)
- Dragon Ball - Xenoverse (2015)
- Dragon Ball Z - Dokkan Battle (2015)
- Dragon Ball Z - Extreme Butoden (2015)
- Dragon Ball - Fusions (2016)
- Dragon Ball - Xenoverse 2 (2016)
- Dragon Ball Heroes - Ultimate Mission X (2017)
- Dragon Ball Z - X KeeperZ (2018)
- Dragon Ball FighterZ (2018)
- Dragon Ball Legends (2018)
- Super Dragon Ball Heroes - World Mission (2019)
- Dragon Ball Z - Kakarot (2020)
Bonus – Crossover Games
- Famicom Jump - Hero Retsuden - 20th Anniversary Jump (1989)
- Super Famicom Magazine Volume 22 - N.G.S.M. (1994)
- Jump Super Stars (2005)
- Battle Stadium D.O.N (2006)
- Jump Ultimate Stars (2006)
Bonus – Best of the 1995-2010 Period
Audio Cassettes
Various tapes containing music, songs, and audio dramas. I am omitting the list because there’s not enough space.
Extras
Other albums, concerts, and background music pieces taken from high quality sources. The AC3 Dragon Ball GT theme songs were extracted from Dragon Box GT by me.
Albums
- Akira Toriyama – The World
- Jump Original CD – Dragon Ball (1)
- Jump Original CD – Dragon Ball (2)
- Dragon Ball Z – Super Gokū Den Kakusei-hen PRCD
- Dragon Ball Z [Super Butōden, France]
- Inazuma Challenger
- Dragonball Evolution
- Dragon Ball Kai:
⋅ Dragon Ball Z Kai - The Final Chapters
⋅ Openings and Endings
- HERO ~ Kibō no Uta ~ “CHA-LA HEAD-CHA-LA”
- Pledge of “Z”
- Dragon Ball Super:
⋅ Dragon Ball Super - Original Soundtrack
⋅ Dragon Ball Super - Original Soundtrack -Volume 2-
⋅ Dragon Ball Super - Super Theme Song Collection
⋅ Singles (Opening, insert, and ending songs)
⋅ Dragon Ball Super - Broly - Original Soundtrack
⋅ Blizzard
- Miscellaneous Tracks
Concert
- Dragon Ball Symphonic Adventure (Paris, 2017)
Background Music
- Miscellaneous Tracks
- Original Score in Video Games
- Background Music (including unreleased pieces):
⋅ Dragon Ball
⋅ Dragon Ball Z
⋅ Dragon Ball GT
Comments - 34
-Sad-
Thank you.
RMgx
I love you
JohnnyOak
“Since it is impossible to keep track of exactly who did what for each and every file…” It’s not impossible. You know full well the ones you got from me. I just have to quickly glance at your list. I mean, if you’re not bothered giving credit, that’s ok, but don’t make up excuses.
Johnster
Awesome library! :D
@JohnnyOak: Come on dude… There’s literally several thousands of files in this library. OP made the quite understandable decision to only point out the ones he ripped himself, mentioning explicitly why he did it.
JohnnyOak
Alright then. Well, check my torrent if you feel like you need a few more albums that aren’t here.
https://nyaa.iss.one/view/1240854
And holler at me if you need me to seed, because it’s hot as balls and my machine will overheat.
strockbel
Thanks, great job as usual.
JohnnyOak: excuse me, did you rip any of those albums? I’m guessing you got them from some other place, so why should you be the one to get the credit?
Anyway, I’m generally against crediting anyone for ripping and sharing stuff. That should be reserved for the content creators only.
dannymx
Amazing work. Thank you.
Impakt
Pity that Dragon Ball: Xenoverse — Network Testing Soundtrack isn’t included. I thought Dragon Ball fans were about preserving media whether final or beta. Suppose not.
I also uploaded the Dragon Ball Z: Tenkaichi 2 score in high quality. I know this stuff that I’ve shared will eventually end up without seeds and I can’t always reseed it.
JohnnyOak
strockbel: yes I did actually, painstakingly so. Many hours of research and work went to getting some of those tracks.
I’m also in good terms with the person who invested large sums of money into buying every cassette tape he could find and ripped every single one of them.
But that’s fine. We did it for the community and for perservation.
I just find it a bit insulting when people go around shitting on others efforts.
JohnnyOak
Impakt, I’ll reserve those for volume 3 of my library.
strockbel
JohnnyOak: chill out. Don’t be the new AnimeMaakuo. Your tape torrent says it’s from an anonymous source and your library torrent makes no mention of who ripped the tracks from the CDs. But it’s pretty clear many of them weren’t ripped by you BTW, since at least some of them have been floating around for years. Which is of course completely fine (unless you actually claim the credit for yourself) as that’s exactly what people do all the time here on Nyaa and elsewhere.
Plus, nobody here has any legal rights to any of the material. If anyone’s due their credit it’s the creators.
You’re making up problems where there are none. Sorry, but it makes you sound really insecure.
Impakt, XV1 beta is kinda nice to have but it’s just Burst Limit music in stereo (it was 5.1 surround in BL). The HQ BT2 OST is included under Raging Blast 2, which is its proper place.
strockbel
AngelSpain, AnimeMaakuo’s character is indeed well described in the thread you linked. Lots of people were scammed by him. But that’s not quite where I’m getting at, even though it’s related.
The thing is, when the first version of this music collection was uploaded, Maakuo (enraged that he lost the opportunity to sell what was not his to sell in the first place) first claimed that everything had been ripped by him, and later that his version was different after all, but superior. Well, it didn’t take long till it was confirmed that quite a few of his rips were of dubious quality, that some others were actually made by someone else, and that the ones present here in the “Audio CDs” folder were indeed 100% accurate all along.
So, in the end, always wanting to be the center of everyone’s attention, Maakuo started a flame war only to be exposed as a fool. All for the futile and vacuous goal of getting the credit for sharing something in an online community made up almost entirely of anonymous people.
guern056
Thank you for this treasure!
Side note: every time a valuable DB upload comes along, be it broadcast audio, this music compilation, multi-audio Dbox encodes, whatever… a flame fest erupts. Guys, please: no one cares. Seriously xD
JohnnyOak
Well, some of us actually care about perservation and sharing. Normally those who complain about it, like you and strockbel, have never done shit for anyone, but are quick to point fingers.
strockbel
JohnnyOak: you’re not making any sense. You’re the one pointing fingers. That’s precisely the issue from the beginning. Also, don’t just assume everyone who disagrees with you has bad motives. That’s called being a cynic and gives the impression of self-projection onto others.
And yeah, for all you know I could have been the one who uploaded the DB broadcast audio a few months back for instance. (To be sure though: I wasn’t.)
Johnster
Guys, it’s okay now. Let’s all be friends. Everybody hug! :D
JohnnyOak
I know it wasn’t you because I know who it was :b
Anonymous uploaders here aren’t very anonymous if you research a bit. Not that it matters.
jillvalentine
Where’s Faulconer?
iKaos
@jillvalentine https://nyaa.iss.one/view/1158788
javieracdc
Thanks for you sharing this!
A doubt
Why did you convert lossy music into a FLAC???
I mean because the background sound of Dragon Ball GT is ripped from episodes and they aren’t in Lossless format. We know that DBGT soundtrack never launched officialy
Johnster
@javieracdc
AFAIK rippers that extract BGM from DVD audio typically need to edit some parts, so it’s always best to work with lossless formats.
Also, regarding GT I’m glad the OP kept the previous version as well because despite it being lossy I like how a few of its tracks sound. (They’re different from the new version.)
rickascot
@Impakt, as a struggling OCD hoarder, I used to think that way too but am now firmly convinced this is an extremely dangerous mindset that should be avoided. Its effects on mental health may be overwhelmingly destructive.
IMO there’s only a reason to preserve beta materials when they offer something unique. And also TBH the more recent stuff that’s come out these past few years no longer has that old DB feel.
For me it’s time to move on. Just my personal take on the matter, of course.
@Uploader, thank you. I have found my definitive Dragon Ball music archive.
Search
Does this include ''The Lone Warrior"? I can’t seem to find it.
SonGoku16736737
thanks a lot loved this work ヾ(。>﹏<。)ノ゙✧*。
icemagician
Do you know where I can get Dragon Soul cover by Vic Mignogna?
WuTangKlann1
@icemagician As far as I know, that was never released on CD. Your best bet would be to put the audio in Premiere and export it uncompressed to make the opening.
Phantom132
*appreciation
vleyznix
Thanks a lot!
SonGokuu
You are amazing! Thank you very much!
T_F_C12
As much as it should be appreciated that someone went out of their way to rip, scan, and compile most all of this… I really wish that the material had been ripped with EAC/XLD or whatever other relevant, capable ripping program there is other than dbPowerAmp simply for archival purposes, namely all the material that may have been embedded inside the CD, such as the TOC and whatever track codes there may have been. These are contained in logs and cue sheets (doesn’t matter what type either, so long as they contain those elements).
Especially because they can be used by database sites like MusicBrainz and VGMdb to represent the releases in the best way possible, even finding similarities & differences between the same tracks on the different CD’s.
Johnster
^
All the CDs ripped by the uploader himself were extracted with EAC in secure mode and all the respective metadata was added. The older torrent’s comment section has a detailed discussion on how to check this oneself with the standalone CUETools app.
Other tracks come from multiple sources from around the web. And well, they are what they are… But unless you’re dealing with a Red Book CD source (which is not the case for the vast majority of those other tracks) EAC isn’t the right tool for the job anyway.
T_F_C12
Anyone can get metadata from the scans (which are provided here) easily enough, and making a rip that passes the AccurateRip check can be done by any program that calibrates offset value properly (foobar2000, MusicBee, etc), but you can’t get a log (TOC/Disc ID) or cue sheet (ISRC) from just the files themselves, or any program besides EAC/CueRipper (Windows) and XLD (Mac).
Also, shouldn’t it be clear that I’m only referring to the redbook specification when I talk about CD rips, scans, logs, and cue sheets? Not sure why anything else would be relevant.
Johnster
But the CDs were in fact ripped with EAC in secure mode, which guarantees accuracy. If you want to confirm that accuracy, you can use CUETools like someone in the previous torrent explains. (Note: once I tried a foobar2000 plugin which checked against Accuraterip if I’m not mistaken, but it only verified against the most common pressing for each CD; the standalone CUETools app checks for other pressings as well.)
Also, each CD folder comes with a .cue file in the (officially non-compliant but) de facto standard, which includes each disc’s ID and each track’s ISRC, effectively all information present in each disc’s TOC. You can open it with ImgBurn (with madFLAC installed) to burn 1:1 copies of each CD, or with a simple text editor to check its contents. EAC logs won’t provide any additional relevant information.
T_F_C12
Actually, the logs provide the only tabulated copy of a TOC in text form, more complete than what files or a cue sheet can give (along with pre-gap information), and it’s the only way besides reading the CD itself to submit a Disc ID to MuiscBrainz, CueTools DB, Free/GnuDB, and anywhere that might use it (such as http://eac-log-lookup.blogspot.com/).
It’s something more useful than showing the CRC for tracks after ripping.
(I saw the cue sheets BTW, they do seem to have the codes, and while they’re not going to be present on all the CD’s, something seems a bit off about their structuring. I mainly use notepad++ for checking cue sheets as well as fixing encodings.)