Difference between revisions of "Ryuichi Sakamoto"

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==Career==
 
==Career==
Sometime in the late 1990's, game developer and fellow musician [[Kenji Eno]] approached Sakamoto to compose the upcoming [[Dreamcast]]'s start-up jingle. To Eno's pleasant surprise, the offer was accepted rather quickly. Sakamoto's start-up jingle would go on to become one of the system's most fondly-remembered features.<ref>JW Szczepaniak (2014). ''The Untold History of Japanese Game Developers: Volume 1''</ref>
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Sometime in the late 1990's, game developer and fellow musician [[Kenji Eno]] approached Sakamoto to compose the upcoming [[Dreamcast]]'s start-up jingle. To Eno's pleasant surprise, the offer was accepted rather quickly.<ref>JW Szczepaniak (2014). ''The Untold History of Japanese Game Developers: Volume 1''</ref> Sakamoto's start-up jingle would go on to become one of the system's most fondly-remembered features.
  
 
===''L.O.L.''===
 
===''L.O.L.''===

Revision as of 04:13, 30 July 2022

RyuichiSakamoto.png
Ryuichi Sakamoto
Place of birth: Tokyo, Japan
Date of birth: 1952-01-17 (age 72)
Employment history:
Role(s): Musician, Composer, Singer
Education: Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music (Bachelor of Music Composition Arts, Master of Electronic and Ethnic Music Arts)

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Ryuichi Sakamoto (坂本龍) is a renowned and highly-influential Japanese musician. A founder of pioneering electronic music group Yellow Magic Orchestra, Sakamoto's early incorporation of electronic sounds into popular music helped inspire a number of future Sega talent to make their way into computer-focused industries (such as Yuji Naka and Kenji Eno), and is most known among the modern gaming community for composing the Sega Dreamcast startup jingle.

Career

Sometime in the late 1990's, game developer and fellow musician Kenji Eno approached Sakamoto to compose the upcoming Dreamcast's start-up jingle. To Eno's pleasant surprise, the offer was accepted rather quickly.[2] Sakamoto's start-up jingle would go on to become one of the system's most fondly-remembered features.

L.O.L.

Main article: L.O.L..

Sakamoto was significantly involved in the production of the November 2000 Sega Dreamcast role-playing game L.O.L.[1], composing and performing the entirety of its soundtrack.

Production history

Hardware

External links

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 File:LOL DC JP Box Back.jpg
  2. JW Szczepaniak (2014). The Untold History of Japanese Game Developers: Volume 1