久石譲
Joe Hisaishi
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Mamoru Fujisawa, known professionally as Joe Hisaishi, is a Japanese composer and musical director known for over 100 film scores and solo albums dating back to 1981. He has been associated with filmmaker Hayao Miyazaki since 1984, having composed scores for all but one of his films. Hisaishi is also widely known for his piano scores.
While possessing a stylistically distinct sound, Hisaishi's music has been known to explore and incorporate different genres, including minimalist, experimental electronic, European classical, and Japanese classical. Lesser known are the other musical roles he plays; he is also a typesetter, author, arranger, and conductor. Hisaishi was a student of composer Takeo Watanabe.
Hisaishi started learning violin in the Violin School Suzuki Shinichi at the age of four, he found his passion in music. At the same age, he also began watching 300 movies a year with his father, which influenced his career. Realizing his love, he attended the Kunitachi College of Music in 1969 to major in music composition. Hisaishi collaborated with minimalist artists as a typesetter, furthering his experience in the musical world.
He enjoyed his first success of the business in 1974 when he composed music for the anime series called Gyatoruzu. This and other early works were created under his given name. He presented his first public performance in the mid '70s, spreading his name around his community.
In 1983, Hisaishi was recommended to create an image album for Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind. Hisaishi and the director of the animated film, Hayao Miyazaki, became great friends and would work together on many future projects. In 1985, he founded his own recording studio—the wonder station. Their collaboration has invited comparisons to the collaborations of Steven Spielberg and John Williams. This big break led to Hisaishi's overwhelming success as a composer of film scores. In 1986, Laputa: Castle in the Sky would be the first feature to appear under the Studio Ghibli banner, and its gentle, faintly melancholic tone would become a familiar trademark of much of the studio's later output. As Hisaishi strengthened his reputation as one of the budding anime industry's top musical contributors, his compositions would proceed to become some of the very hallmarks of early anime in the '80s and '90s.
Hisaishi formulated an alias inspired by Quincy Jones, an African-American musician and producer. Re-transcribed in Japanese, "Quincy Jones" became "Joe Hisaishi". ("Quincy", pronounced "Kuinshī” in Japanese, can be written using the same kanji in "Hisaishi"; "Joe" comes from "Jones".)
(Source: Wikipedia)
Mamoru Fujisawa, known professionally as Joe Hisaishi, is a Japanese composer and musical director known for over 100 film scores and solo albums dating back to 1981. He has been associated with filmmaker Hayao Miyazaki since 1984, having composed scores for all but one of his films. Hisaishi is also widely known for his piano scores.
While possessing a stylistically distinct sound, Hisaishi's music has been known to explore and incorporate different genres, including minimalist, experimental electronic, European classical, and Japanese classical. Lesser known are the other musical roles he plays; he is also a typesetter, author, arranger, and conductor. Hisaishi was a student of composer Takeo Watanabe.
Hisaishi started learning violin in the Violin School Suzuki Shinichi at the age of four, he found his passion in music. At the same age, he also began watching 300 movies a year with his father, which influenced his career. Realizing his love, he attended the Kunitachi College of Music in 1969 to major in music composition. Hisaishi collaborated with minimalist artists as a typesetter, furthering his experience in the musical world.
He enjoyed his first success of the business in 1974 when he composed music for the anime series called Gyatoruzu. This and other early works were created under his given name. He presented his first public performance in the mid '70s, spreading his name around his community.
In 1983, Hisaishi was recommended to create an image album for Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind. Hisaishi and the director of the animated film, Hayao Miyazaki, became great friends and would work together on many future projects. In 1985, he founded his own recording studio—the wonder station. Their collaboration has invited comparisons to the collaborations of Steven Spielberg and John Williams. This big break led to Hisaishi's overwhelming success as a composer of film scores. In 1986, Laputa: Castle in the Sky would be the first feature to appear under the Studio Ghibli banner, and its gentle, faintly melancholic tone would become a familiar trademark of much of the studio's later output. As Hisaishi strengthened his reputation as one of the budding anime industry's top musical contributors, his compositions would proceed to become some of the very hallmarks of early anime in the '80s and '90s.
Hisaishi formulated an alias inspired by Quincy Jones, an African-American musician and producer. Re-transcribed in Japanese, "Quincy Jones" became "Joe Hisaishi". ("Quincy", pronounced "Kuinshī” in Japanese, can be written using the same kanji in "Hisaishi"; "Joe" comes from "Jones".)
(Source: Wikipedia)
アニメスタッフ
| もののけ姫 | 音楽 |
| 千と千尋の神隠し | 音楽 |
| 君たちはどう生きるか | Music |
| 紅の豚 | 音楽 |
| ハウルの動く城 | 音楽 |
| 魔女の宅急便 | 音楽 |
| 天空の城ラピュタ | 音楽 |
| となりのトトロ | 音楽 |
| ヴイナス戦記 | 音楽監督 |
| 風の谷のナウシカ | 音楽 |
| ネオ・ヒロイック・ファンタジア アリオン | 音楽 |
| 愛してナイト | 主題歌編曲 (OP・ED) |
| めいとこねこバス | 音楽 |
| バース | 音楽 |
| オズの魔法使い | 音楽 |
| 崖の上のポニョ | 音楽 |
| 機甲創世記モスピーダ Love | 音楽 |
| さすがの猿飛 | 音楽 |
| 炎のアルペンローゼ・ジュディ&ランディ | 音楽 |
| ふたり鷹 | 音楽 |
| 銀河疾風サスライガー | 音楽 |
| テクノポリス21C | 挿入歌作曲 |
| テクノポリス21C | 主題歌編曲 (OP・ED) |
| テクノポリス21C | 挿入歌編曲 |
| テクノポリス21C | 音楽 |
| オズの魔法使い | 音楽 |
| 空想の空飛ぶ機械達 | Music |
| パン種とタマゴ姫 | 音楽 |
| 機甲創世記モスピーダ | 音楽 |
| 風立ちぬ | 音楽 |
| かぐや姫の物語 | 音楽 |
| 空想の空飛ぶ機械達 | 音楽 |
| ろぼっ子ビートン | 音楽 |
| 毛虫のボロ | 音楽 |
| 海獣の子供 | 音楽 |
| 二ノ国 | 音楽 |
| 君たちはどう生きるか | 音楽 |
| リヴァイアサン | 音楽 |
| リヴァイアサン | 主題歌作曲 (ED) |
| ミスター・ジャイアンツ 栄光の背番号3 | 音楽 |
| 二死満塁 | 音楽 |
| ヴイナス戦記 | Music Director |
| 海獣の子供 | Music |
| 風の谷のナウシカ | Music |
| ネオ・ヒロイック・ファンタジア アリオン | Music |
| 魔女の宅急便 | Music |
| となりのトトロ | Theme Song Arrangement (OP, ED) |
| となりのトトロ | Theme Song Composition (OP, ED) |
| となりのトトロ | Music |
| 毛虫のボロ | Music |
| バース | Music |
| 機甲創世記モスピーダ | Music |
| 機甲創世記モスピーダ Love | Music |
| 天空の城ラピュタ | Music |
| 天空の城ラピュタ | Theme Song Composition (OP, ED) |
| 天空の城ラピュタ | Theme Song Arrangement (ED) |
| かぐや姫の物語 | Music |
| かぐや姫の物語 | Conductor |
| かぐや姫の物語 | Music Piano Performance |
| 崖の上のポニョ | Music |
| 崖の上のポニョ | Music Piano Performance |
| 崖の上のポニョ | Theme Song Composition (OP, ED) |
| 崖の上のポニョ | Theme Song Arrangement (OP, ED) |
| 崖の上のポニョ | Conductor |
| めいとこねこバス | Music |
| ロボット・カーニバル | Music |
| パン種とタマゴ姫 | Music |
| 風立ちぬ | Music |
| テクノポリス21C | Music |
| テクノポリス21C | Theme Song Arrangement (OP, ED) |
| テクノポリス21C | Insert Song Arrangement |
| テクノポリス21C | Insert Song Composition |
| 千と千尋の神隠し | Music Piano Performance |
| 千と千尋の神隠し | Conductor |
| 千と千尋の神隠し | Music |
| リヴァイアサン | Music |
| リヴァイアサン | Theme Song Composition (ED) |
| 紅の豚 | Music |
| ハウルの動く城 | Theme Song Arrangement |
| ハウルの動く城 | Music |
| 二ノ国 | Music |
| さすがの猿飛 | Music |
| オズの魔法使い | Music |
| ろぼっ子ビートン | Music |
| 炎のアルペンローゼ・ジュディ&ランディ | Music |
| ふたり鷹 | Music |