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Kenji Ito
Kenji Ito
musician
1
Yoko Shimomura
Yoko Shimomura
Japanese composer and pianist
2
Tsuyoshi Sekito
Tsuyoshi Sekito
Japanese composer
3
Yasunori Mitsuda
Yasunori Mitsuda
video game composer
4
Masayoshi Soken
Masayoshi Soken
Japanese composer
5
Kumi Tanioka
Kumi Tanioka
Japanese composer
6
Nobuo Uematsu
Nobuo Uematsu
Japanese video game composer
7
Hitoshi Sakimoto
Hitoshi Sakimoto
Japanese composer
8
Jonne Valtonen
Jonne Valtonen
Finnish composer
9
Junya Nakano
Junya Nakano
Japanese composer
10
Koichi Sugiyama
Koichi Sugiyama
Japanese composer, arranger, conductor (1931-)
11
Yuzo Koshiro
Yuzo Koshiro
Japanese video game music composer, electronic music producer, and audio programmer
12
Masashi Hamauzu
Masashi Hamauzu
Japanese composer and pianist
13
The Black Mages
The Black Mages
Japanese instrumental rock band
14
Masaharu Iwata
Masaharu Iwata
Japanese composer
15
Jeremy Soule
Jeremy Soule
American composer
16
Kenichiro Fukui
Kenichiro Fukui
Japanese composer and musician
17
Noriko Matsueda
Noriko Matsueda
Japanese composer
18
Ryuji Sasai
Ryuji Sasai
Japanese musician
19
Takahito Eguchi
Takahito Eguchi
Japanese musician
20
Kow Otani
Kow Otani
Japanese composer
21
Jack Wall
Jack Wall
video game music composer
Intro
Japanese composer

Hiroki Kikuta (菊田 裕樹, Kikuta Hiroki, born August 29, 1962 as Yūki Kikuta) is a Japanese video game composer and game designer. His major works are Secret of Mana, Trials of Mana, Soukaigi, and Koudelka, for which he also acted as producer and concept designer. He has composed music for seven other games, and worked as a concept designer in addition to composer for the unreleased MMORPG Chou Bukyo Taisen. He became interested in music at an early age, but earned a degree in Religious Studies, Philosophy, and Cultural Anthropology from Kansai University. He spent the next few years working first as a manga illustrator, then as a composer for anime series, before coming to work for Square in 1991.

After composing the soundtracks for his first three best-known works, he formed his own video game production company, Sacnoth, for which he was the president and CEO. After producing and composing Koudelka in 1999, he left to become a freelance composer. Since his departure he has formed his own record label, Norstrilia, through which he produces albums of his own compositions and collaborations with other artists, as well as his previous scores. His music has been performed in concerts such as the Symphonic Fantasies concerts in Cologne, Germany in September 2009, and selections of his works have been published as piano arrangements in sheet music books.