Anime The series was released on
DVD in 2001 by
Central Park Media in the United States, in 2002 by
Happinet Pictures in Japan, and in 1997 by
Manga Entertainment in the United Kingdom.
Music }}
Polydor K.K., a member of the series' production committee, recommended
Susumu Hirasawa, an artist from their roster, to compose music for the series. Hirasawa took the role because of a wish to work with producer Satoshi Koizumi, whose personality drew Hirasawa in after requesting him to dispel the image that anime soundtracks had. The composer was asked to write the anime's main theme first, and it was presented to Koizumi and director
Masami Ōbari in late 1990, before animation had started. Hirasawa wrote and performed all the music for the OVA, in his film score composer debut (previous soundtrack work amounted to commercial jingles and pro wrestling entrance themes). Similarly to his solo albums
Water in Time and Space,
The Ghost in Science and
Virtual Rabbit, Hirasawa mixed together electronic and symphonic sounds, using elements across a broad range of music styles, with a large focus on
classical music. At the time, Hirasawa thought of anime and movie soundtracks only as enhancements and not as standalone works, and made the soundtracks considering it as "a job" and "entertainment", employing an epic tone and dramatic exaggeration in his composing. He drew songwriting elements from his solo albums throughout the soundtrack, and used already-made songs from them as ending themes and insert songs. The first soundtrack was made simultaneously with
Virtual Rabbit, and was made by Hirasawa basing himself on production materials.
Detonator Orgun 3 was entirely recorded on Hirasawa's private Studio Wireself. Hirasawa eventually got tired of working on the series, and considered
Detonator Orgun 3 to be the worst album of his solo career, yet also considers the experience helpful in making later soundtracks, in particular the music for the
Berserk series, and regards the "grand and delicate" technique for orchestral tones he developed through this soundtrack as guidance for his later works in general. Series writer enjoyed the soundtrack, later commissioning Hirasawa to compose for his fantasy manga
Glory Wars; this music was later released as an
image mini-album of the same name. To promote the album, the remix of "Bandeira Travellers" (used as the ending theme of episode 1) was released a month ahead as a single and a sampler
Mini CD, while the opening and ending themes of episode 1 were distributed to interested parties. In addition to the episode soundtracks, a drama CD was also released, containing select music from the soundtracks and audio from the series itself. The series' main theme was included on the 2007 compilation
Music For Movies: World of Susumu Hirasawa Soundtracks. Hirasawa had the soundtracks remastered for the 2012 boxset
Haldyn Dome; his former record label did the same for the 2014 compilation
Symphonic Code (since those were catalog-wide projects, songs that were also present on other albums were omitted to avoid duplication, being either included on earlier discs of the boxset or on the
Archetype compilation).
Glory Wars was bundled together with the soundtracks for these reissues. Hirasawa has seldom brought up his soundtracks for the series in his overall career. Some
P-Model material originated out of the soundtrack. In his 1994 shows, the title theme was played over the PA system before they began; Hirasawa usually opened his shows with "Frozen Beach '94", a rearrangement of "YOHKO Mitsurugi" with the lyrics of "Frozen Beach". A studio recording of this version, simply titled "FROZEN BEACH", was released a year later on the
Scuba Recycle album. {{Track listing|headline=Detonator Orgun 1|all_writing=
Susumu Hirasawa. "Bandeira Travellers" and "SUNSET" have string and choral arrangements by Hirasawa and Kayo "Kokubo" Matsumoto. "Root of Spirit" titled by Toshiaki Minejima with string arrangement by
Jun Miyake {{Track listing|headline=Detonator Orgun 2 {{Track listing|headline=Detonator Orgun 3 ==Development==