0
Graeme Norgate
Graeme Norgate
British composer
1
Neil D. Voss
Neil D. Voss
American composer
2
David Wise
David Wise
British video game music composer
3
Koji Kondo
Koji Kondo
Japanese video game composer
4
Jack Wall
Jack Wall
video game music composer
5
Matt Uelmen
Matt Uelmen
Video game composer
6
Russell Shaw
Russell Shaw
British composer and sound designer
7
Hirokazu Tanaka
Hirokazu Tanaka
Japanese composer
8
Michael Giacchino
Michael Giacchino
American composer of music for films, television and video games
9
Chance Thomas
Chance Thomas
American composer
10
Grant Kirkhope
Grant Kirkhope
Scottish video game composer
11
Martin O'Donnell
Martin O'Donnell
American video game composer
12
Michael Salvatori
Michael Salvatori
American composer
13
Kenji Yamamoto
Kenji Yamamoto
Japanese video game musician
14
Brian L. Schmidt
Brian L. Schmidt
Video game music composer
15
Jake Kaufman
Jake Kaufman
American composer
16
Jeremy Soule
Jeremy Soule
American composer
17
Inon Zur
Inon Zur
American award-winning music composer in film, television and video games
18
Gordy Haab
Gordy Haab
American Composer
19
Peter McConnell
Peter McConnell
American video game composer and musician
Intro
American composer
Music

Brad Allen Fuller (November 5, 1953 – January 2, 2016) was an American video game composer known for his work for Atari, Inc. and Atari Games.

Fuller composed the soundtracks for Marble Madness, released by Atari Games in 1984, Blasteroids, released in 1987, and Tengen Tetris, which was originally released in 1988. He also served as the Director of Audio of Atari, in which he oversaw all of the company's soundtracks and music for its video games. Fuller was promoted to Director of Engineering in 1993. He remained at Atari until his departure in 1996.

Fuller was born in Indianapolis, Indiana, on November 5, 1953. He studied jazz at both the Berklee College of Music in Massachusetts and Indiana University Bloomington.

Fuller had originally began his career at Atari as an audio engineer in 1982. He engineered the audio for a number of Atari, Inc.'s titles, including the Atari 8-bit family ports of Donkey Kong and Robotron: 2084.

In 1996, Fuller left Atari to become to join Matter to Magic Studios as a partner. He then worked at OpenTV, a software technology company focusing on digital television, for three years. Fuller departed OpenTV to establish Sonaural Audio Studios, a video game audio development firm.

In 2002, Fuller received a Master of Science in technology management from Pepperdine University. In later life, he worked to advance 3D capture. He also taught at Cogswell Polytechnical College in Sunnyvale, California.