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Tenpei Sato
Tenpei Sato
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Key Information

Tenpei Sato (佐藤 天平, Satō Tenpei) is a video game composer and voice actor. His most notable works are his soundtracks for Nippon Ichi Software games, such as Disgaea and Phantom Brave. He also provides voice-over for games and movies.

Biography

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Sato was born in 1967 in Kawagoe, Japan and grew up in Tokyo.[1][2] He began playing piano at the age of six, and made his first composition, a piece for guitar, at the age of twelve. His first job was at Telenet Japan, where he composed the score for the action role-playing game XZR and popular side-scroller Valis II. After leaving Telenet, he joined Glodia, and together with Nobuhito Koise, composed the soundtrack to the cult classic Emerald Dragon. Later he would compose both Vain Dream with Abreath Nakamura and Bible Master II. After leaving Glodia, he joined Birdy Soft, and produced soundtracks for four of their games. He has since spent much of his career working with Nippon Ichi Software, which is where his music has gained its greatest recognition. Games he has composed for include the Rhapsody series, Disgaea: Hour of Darkness, La Pucelle: Tactics, and Phantom Brave.[2]

A Nippon Ichi concert by the G-Dream 21 Ladies Orchestra was held on June 23 2024 in Ginza, Tokyo. Sato composed the orchestral arrangements of his work and attended as a special guest.[3] In an interview, he commented that he was most looking forward to the orchestral arrangements of "Determination of a Little Princess" from the 1999 Rhapsody II, a fan favorite track, and "Kill Real" from the 2015 Disgaea 5, which required major revisions to make a chaotic vocal song work for an orchestra.[4]

Musical style and influence

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Sato cites Queen, Claude Debussy, Ryuichi Sakamoto, and Kate Bush as major musical influences.[5]

Works

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References

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from Grokipedia
''Tenpei Sato'' is a Japanese video game composer and voice actor known for his distinctive soundtracks for Nippon Ichi Software titles, including the long-running Disgaea series, Phantom Brave, Soul Nomad & the World Eaters, and the Marl Kingdom series. His work often features a blend of orchestral arrangements, vocal performances, and influences from classical, rock, and ethnic musical traditions, tailored to match each game's tone, story, and characters. Born on April 21, 1967, in Kawagoe, Japan, Sato began playing piano at age six and later attended Waseda University. He entered the video game industry in the late 1980s, composing for early titles at Telenet Japan such as Valis II and XZR II, before working with Glodia on projects including Emerald Dragon. His career gained prominence through a long-term association with Nippon Ichi Software starting in the late 1990s, where he contributed music to numerous strategy and role-playing games, frequently incorporating theatrical elements, choral pieces, and original vocal tracks. Sato has also provided voice acting in select games and operates Tenpei Artists Inc., which has been credited on several recent Nippon Ichi Software releases. His ongoing contributions to the industry span decades, with notable recent works including Labyrinth of Galleria: The Moon Society and entries in the Disgaea franchise.

Early life and education

Birth and early years

Tenpei Sato was born on April 21, 1967, in Kawagoe, Saitama Prefecture, Japan. He is also professionally known by the alias Strawberry Boy. No further details about his early childhood or family background are widely documented in available sources.

Education and decision to pursue music

Tenpei Sato graduated from Waseda University with a degree in Education. During his university years, he participated in teacher training courses but found them uninspiring, leading him to decide to pursue a career in music composition rather than teaching. Sato is proficient in multiple instruments, including piano (which he began playing at age 6), electric guitar, clarinet, and vocals. This musical foundation, combined with his disillusionment with a teaching path, marked the pivotal shift toward his professional work as a composer.

Career

Early roles and compositions (1987–1990s)

Tenpei Sato began his professional music career as a trainee composer at Geinoh Yamashirogumi from 1987 to 1988. Following this training period, he joined Telenet Japan as a composer from 1988 to 1989, where he created scores for several video games including the action role-playing title XZR II (1988), the side-scrolling action game Valis II (1989), and Cyber City. His contributions at Telenet often extended beyond composition to roles such as sound designer and arranger on related soundtrack albums. In 1990, Sato transitioned to freelance work, composing and arranging for a variety of video game projects both collaboratively and independently. Representative examples include collaborative efforts on Emerald Dragon (1992) and Vain Dream (1992), alongside primary composition credits for Alshark (1991), Bible Master II (1994), Etemible: Tenjou Mukyuu (1995), Eko Eko Azarak: Wizard of Darkness (1996), the Cal series (beginning 1992), and the Beast series (beginning 1992). These projects often involved additional responsibilities such as performance, programming, and production, reflecting his multifaceted involvement in game audio during this era.

Collaboration with Nippon Ichi Software (1998 onward)

Tenpei Sato's long-term collaboration with Nippon Ichi Software began in 1998 with his composition of the complete musical score for Rhapsody: A Musical Adventure (known in Japan as Marl Oukoku no Ningyouhime), a project that established his signature style within the company through strong melodies, emotional variety, and his hands-on involvement in recording and voice actor coordination at his Shibuya studio. This breakthrough led to continued work on the Marl Kingdom series, including sequels such as Rhapsody II: Ballad of the Little Princess (1999) and Rhapsody III: Memories of Marl Kingdom (2000), where he composed, arranged, performed, and contributed vocals, as well as later releases like the Marl Oukoku no Ningyouhime 25th Anniversary Collection in 2024. From 2002 onward, Sato solidified his role as the primary composer for Nippon Ichi Software's tactical RPGs, beginning with La Pucelle: Tactics (2002), which featured an emotionally rich orchestral score accompanied by a commercial arrange album where he handled arrangement, performance, production, engineering, and mixing. He followed with landmark titles including Phantom Brave (2004), noted for its youthful and sentimental approach, Makai Kingdom (2005), and Soul Nomad & the World Eaters (2007), the latter incorporating mature Celtic- and Asian-influenced orchestral elements. Sato's most prominent association has been with the Disgaea series, starting with Disgaea: Hour of Darkness (2003), where he combined haunting orchestral pieces, action-oriented themes, and diverse vocal tracks. He has composed, arranged, performed, and produced music for every mainline entry through Disgaea 6: Defiance of Destiny (2021), along with numerous arrange albums featuring his vocals, lyrics, engineering, and liner notes. He also provided music for the 2006 Disgaea animated series across its 11 episodes. Beyond these core series, Sato has contributed to other major Nippon Ichi Software projects, including the Prinny series starting in 2008, Mugen Souls (2012–2013), The Witch and the Hundred Knight series from 2013 onward, Labyrinth of Refrain: Coven of Dusk (2016), and Labyrinth of Galleria: The Moon Society (2020). Across these works, he frequently takes on multiple roles as composer, arranger, performer, sound producer, recording and mixing engineer, synthesizer programmer, and occasional vocalist or lyricist, contributing to both original soundtracks and extensive arrange albums. This prolific partnership has defined much of his career and reputation in video game music.

Recent and ongoing projects

In the 2010s and 2020s, Tenpei Sato has continued his long-standing collaboration with Nippon Ichi Software, composing and arranging music through his Tenpei Studio. In 2015, he served as composer and arranger for the soundtracks of Trillion: God of Destruction (with the Makaishin Trillion Original Soundtrack released that year and the English version the following year) and MeiQ: Labyrinth of Death (with its special soundtrack issued in December 2015). He also released the compilation album SATO TENPEI the BEST2 [Heroic Saga] around this period, collecting selections from his works. Entering the 2020s, Sato composed and arranged the music for Brigandine: The Legend of Runersia, with its original soundtrack "Music of Runersia" released in 2020 and an arrange soundtrack following in 2021. His ongoing involvement includes composing the soundtrack for the upcoming Phantom Brave: The Lost Hero, with its original soundtrack scheduled for release on January 30, 2025. Compilation albums highlighting his Nippon Ichi contributions, such as Tenpei Sato the BEST Beautiful Days Nippon Ichi Music Collection, have also featured prominently in showcasing his career output.

Musical style and influences

Key influences

Tenpei Sato has cited Queen, Debussy, Ryuichi Sakamoto, and Kate Bush as major musical influences. These are explicitly listed in his composer profile on the Square Enix Music website. In a 2010 interview, Sato described beginning piano lessons in early childhood and enjoying a variety of classical music, specifically mentioning Chopin and Debussy among his early inspirations. He also noted that Queen was the band that most influenced his own middle school rock band experiences.

Composition approach and multi-role involvement

Tenpei Sato is frequently credited in multiple roles on the same projects, serving as composer, arranger, performer, vocalist, recording engineer, mixing engineer, sound producer, programmer, and lyricist. VGMdb documents 190 composer credits, 124 arranger credits, 39 performer credits, 26 vocals credits, 24 recording engineer credits, 23 mixing engineer credits, 16 lyricist credits, 11 sound producer credits, and 8 programmer credits for his work. He commonly combines these functions, such as composing and arranging while also handling performance, vocals, recording, mixing, and production duties within individual titles. Sato maintains Tenpei Studio as his personal facility for recording and mixing, where he conducts much of his production work. This integrated setup allows him to oversee multiple stages of music creation in a single environment, often where he lives and works combined. His soundtracks, particularly those for Nippon Ichi Software, are known for melodic and dramatic compositions that prominently incorporate vocal elements, including sung songs and choral or ethereal parts to heighten emotional impact. Sato often performs vocals himself on tracks and directs vocal sessions to achieve warm, expressive results aligned with the intended mood. He prioritizes crafting music that closely reflects the project's worldview, character emotions, and narrative tone rather than adhering to a single stylistic template.

Other activities

Voice acting and performance credits

Although primarily known as a composer for Nippon Ichi Software titles, Tenpei Sato has occasionally taken on voice acting and other performance roles in video games. His sole documented voice acting credit is providing the voice for the Frog Dancers in Rhapsody: A Musical Adventure (1999). Early in his career, he also served as casting producer for the 1993 video game Findo Hanta. In addition to these limited on-mic and production contributions, Sato has provided chorus and vocals on numerous soundtracks associated with his compositions, particularly in arrange albums for series such as Disgaea, Phantom Brave, and La Pucelle. These include chorus work across multiple entries from the 1990s through the 2020s, as well as occasional vocals and a specific instance of baritone vocals in Brigandine Lunasia Senki Arrange Soundtrack (2021). Such performance roles remain supplementary to his extensive work behind the scenes as a composer.

Solo projects and non-video game work

Tenpei Sato has pursued a variety of creative endeavors beyond his well-known contributions to video game soundtracks. These include solo and image albums, film scoring, and other artistic activities that highlight his diverse musical background and interests. Among his notable solo projects is the album Imagination (1995), a personal work inspired by the atmosphere of Tokyo's Shinjuku area, featuring piano pieces influenced by French composers like Debussy and performed in part by pianist Kaori Oosuga, as well as eclectic elements such as a rap dialogue track. He also released the experimental image album Schell Bullet Thanaphs68 (2000), a cyber-progressive-space fantasy project based on Kunihiko Ikuhara's novel, incorporating avant-garde techniques like voice percussion using sampled words and speeches alongside beautiful vocal melodies. Sato has composed scores for films, including the avant-garde fantasy music for the psychic horror movie D#1, which earned an award at a Swedish film festival, and the delicate, space-emphasizing soundtrack for the romance film Flowers, utilizing only piano, strings, and acoustic guitar. He additionally created music for Sony's AIBO robotic pet, working within technical constraints on polyphony. Outside of composition, Sato has produced debut singles for idol groups and artists, written the guidebook Computer Music: A Super Beginner's Manual, and participated in acting and music creation with his own theatrical group, drawing on earlier experiences in theater and performance. Details on many of these non-video game projects remain relatively limited in public sources.
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