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[107] The first ten volumes sold over 15 million copies,[108] and the eleventh volume reached number one on the
Tohan charts,[109]
selling an additional two million copies. [110] The manga series won the
1996 Comicker fan manga poll. [111] The story has been adapted into several other manga series in addition to the original Sadamoto project, including Campus Apocalypse, a mystery story that omits the Evangelion units, and Petit Eva: Evangelion@School, a parody series which received its own original net animation serial show. Soundtracks and music[edit] Main article: Music of Neon Genesis Evangelion Shirō Sagisu composed most of the original music for the series. The soundtracks
released to high rankings on the Oricon charts, with Neon Genesis Evangelion III reaching the number one slot for highest sales in 1997;[112] that same year, Sagisu received the Kobe Animation award for "Best Music Score" for his work on Evangelion. [113] Classical music by Ludwig van Beethoven,[57] Johann Sebastian Bach,[114] Giuseppe Verdi and George Frideric Handel[74] were also featured throughout the series and the movies. Additional classical works and original symphonic compositions were used to score later movies produced within the Neon Genesis Evangelion franchise. In total, the series' discography includes twenty-one full studio, live, compilation and soundtrack albums and six CD singles. The series' opening theme is "A Cruel Angel's Thesis", performed by Yoko Takahashi. It ranked on two TV Asahi polls, reaching 55th for best anime theme songs of all time, and eighteenth for best anime theme songs of the 1990s. [115][116] Fifteen years after its release, the theme won JASRAC's annual award for the royalties it continues to generate from its usage in pachinko, pachislo, karaoke and other venues.
Archived from the original on
September 1, 2019.
Retrieved September 1, 2019. ^ Hodgkins, Crystalyn (December 13, 2019). "Dr. Stone Anime Gets 2nd Season". Anime News Network.
99. Retrieved July 29, 2016. ^ "Japan's
Animation Blu-ray Disc Ranking, December 19–25". Anime
News Network. January 5, 2017. Archived from the original on January 6, 2017. Retrieved January 5, 2017. ^ "Japan's Animation DVD Ranking, December 19–25". Anime News Network. January 5, 2017. Archived from the original on January 6, 2017.