Tomoki Hasegawa
Tomoki Hasegawa III (長谷川 智樹 Hasegawa Tomoki) is a Japanese composer and arranger of music, best known for his work on anime soundtracks, born on 19 July 1957 in Ikeda, Osaka Prefecture, Japan.[1] He has also done sound production work on albums for Mayumi Iizuka.
Works
Anime
- Pygmalio (opening and ending themes arrangement, 1990–1991)
- Locke the Superman: New World Command (1991)
- Magical Princess Minky Momo (2nd series, 1991)
- Legend of the Galactic Heroes: Golden Wings (1992)
- Genki Bakuhatsu Ganbaruger (1992–1993)
- Jeanie with the Light Brown Hair (opening theme, 1992–1993)
- Mikan Enikki (1992–1993)
- Nekketsu Saikyō Go-Saurer (1993–1994)
- Wedding Peach (1995–1996)
- Starship Girl Yamamoto Yohko (first OVA series, 1996)
- Tenchi in Tokyo (ending theme 2, 1997)
- D.N.Angel (2003)
- DearS (2004)
- Gokusen (2004)
- Kujibiki Unbalance (second stage, 2006)
- Nana (2006–2007)
- Sayonara Zetsubō Sensei (2007)
- Majin Tantei Nōgami Neuro (2007–2008)
- Quiz Magic Academy (2008)
- (Zoku) Sayonara Zetsubō Sensei (2008)
- Nazo no Kanojo X (2012)
Films
- Crêpe (1993)
- Shura ga Yuku 6: Tōhoku Gekitōhen (1997)
- The Summer of Dioxin (2001)
- Suicide Club (2002)
- Noriko's Dinner Table (2005)
- Exte (2007)
TV programs
- Nameshite Gatten (NHK, 1995)
Video games
- Gradius III (arrangement, 1989, soundtrack released in 1990)
- Rise of the Phoenix (Koei, 1995)
- Romance of the Three Kingdoms VII (Koei, 2000)
Sources:[4]
Sound production
Hasegawa did sound production work on one or more songs from these albums.
- Mayumi Iizuka
- Kata Omoi (1997)
- Minto to Kuchibue (1998)
- Fly Ladybird Fly (1998)
- So Loving (1999)
- Aeris (2000)
- Himawari (2001)
- Niji no Saku Basho (2002)
- SMILE×SMILE (2003)
- ∞Infinity∞ (2004)
- Mine (2005)
- 10LOVE (2006)
- Crystal Days (2007)
- Stories (2008)
- Fight!! (2009)
- Kimi e... (2009)
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 "Tomoki Hasegawa". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 2008-06-28.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 "長谷川智樹". Japanese Movie Database. Retrieved 2008-06-28.
- ↑ "長谷川智樹". Variety Japan. Retrieved 2008-06-28.
- ↑ "Tomoki Hasegawa". VGMdb: A Database of Videogame Music. Retrieved 2008-06-28.
External links
- (Japanese) Official site
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