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Page "Nobuo Uematsu" ¶ 8
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Uematsu and left
After Nobuo Uematsu left Square Enix in 2004, Hamauzu took over as the leading composer of the company's music team.
They had also left Square Enix ; Uematsu built the new band to not include any current Square Enix employees so as to avoid the trademark and licensing problems of The Black Mages.

Uematsu and Square
Most of the tracks were composed by Kenji Ito, while track 16, " Chocobo Tanjou ( Chocobo's Birth )," is credited to renowned Square composer Nobuo Uematsu.
Uematsu joined Square ( later Square Enix ) in 1986, where he met Final Fantasy creator Hironobu Sakaguchi.
When Uematsu was working at a music rental shop in Tokyo, a Square employee asked if he would be interested in creating music for some of the titles they were working on.
The first game Uematsu composed for Square was Genesis in 1985.
While working at Square, he met Hironobu Sakaguchi, who asked him if he wanted to create music for some of his games, which Uematsu agreed to.
In 1987, Uematsu and Sakaguchi collaborated on what was originally to be Sakaguchi's last contribution for Square, Final Fantasy, a game that turned out to be a huge success.
In 2002, fellow Square Enix colleagues Kenichiro Fukui and Tsuyoshi Sekito asked Uematsu to join them in forming a rock band that focused on reinterpreting and expanding on Uematsu's compositions.
* Japanese composer Nobuo Uematsu used portions of " O Fortuna ", " Estuans interius ", and " Veni, veni, venias " for the final boss theme " One-Winged Angel " in Square Enix's Final Fantasy VII.
* November 5 — Nobuo Uematsu resigns from Square Enix and becomes a freelancer, starting his own business, called Smile Please Co., Ltd ..
In 1991, after Fujioka had been hired as a director for Square, Sasai was invited to join the company as they needed composers to assist Nobuo Uematsu and Kenji Ito.
His subsequent work for Square was 1992's Final Fantasy Mystic Quest ( known as " Mystic Quest Legend " in Europe ), which he composed with Yasuhiro Kawakami ; it was the first game in the Final Fantasy series not to be composed by regular series composer Uematsu.
The Black Mages were a Japanese instrumental rock band formed in 2002 by Nobuo Uematsu, Kenichiro Fukui and Tsuyoshi Sekito-three composers for Square Enix.
Among video game music influences, he has cited Square for providing him " with the education for what quality means to this business " and Nobuo Uematsu in particular.
Philip of Square Enix Music Online, however, disliked the sound quality of the soundtrack and saw several tracks as " trivial ", though he did note that Uematsu " has a flair for strong, memorable " pieces.
Among the composers she grew familiar with were Square employees Hitoshi Sakimoto, Nobuo Uematsu and Kenji Ito.
This is the cover of the Chrono Trigger Original Sound Version, composed by Yasunori Mitsuda, Nobuo Uematsu, and Noriko Matsueda, and produced, distributed and owned by Square Enix.

Uematsu and formed
In 1991, he also formed a series called Orchestral Game Concerts, notable for featuring other talented game composers such as Yoko Kanno ( Nobunaga's Ambition, Romance of the Three Kingdoms, Uncharted Waters ), Nobuo Uematsu ( Final Fantasy ), Keiichi Suzuki ( Mother / Earthbound ), and Kentaro Haneda ( Wizardry ).

Uematsu and company
This freedom was helped by the fact that Uematsu ran the music group as a separate division in the company from the game developers.
The track was well received in the company, which gave Uematsu " a sense that it was going to be a really good project ".

Uematsu and Smile
Declining at first due to feeling too busy with his composing duties and attempts to become a music producer with his Smile Please label, Uematsu agreed to join them in a single live performance as a keyboardist.

Uematsu and ;
For Final Fantasy XI from 2002, he was joined by Naoshi Mizuta, who composed the majority of the soundtrack, and Kumi Tanioka ; Uematsu was responsible for only eleven tracks.
He worked so hard that he developed stomach ulcers and had to be hospitalized, which led Uematsu to offer to finish the remaining tracks for him ; Uematsu ended up composing ten tracks, one of which he was assisted on by Noriko Matsueda.
At the performance, Uematsu felt a " mix of stage fright and excitement, all the crowds cheering, the audience paying full attention ", and decided to join the two in making a band ; Fukui and Sekito had refused to start one if Uematsu was not involved as one of the musicians.
The trio arranged, interpreted, and sequenced ten battle themes from various Final Fantasy titles, with Uematsu as producer ; the album was released eponymously on February 19, 2003.
To celebrate the success, Uematsu decided to organize a concert in tribute to the album ; Uematsu and Fukui served as the keyboardists, while Sekito was the guitarist.
In 2001, Nakano and Hamauzu were chosen to assist Uematsu in the production of the score for the critically acclaimed Final Fantasy X, based on their ability to create music that was different from Uematsu's style ; Nakano created 20 pieces.
" One of the main conditions for the project's launch was to reunite the original staff members of Final Fantasy VII ; art director Yusuke Naora, composer Nobuo Uematsu, and scenario writer Kazushige Nojima.
To date, these are the only released albums based on the original game's soundtrack, and were solely composed by regular series composer Nobuo Uematsu ; his role for the majority of subsequent albums has been filled by Masashi Hamauzu and Takeharu Ishimoto.
The first piece that Uematsu composed for the game was the opening theme ; game director Yoshinori Kitase showed him the opening cinematic to the game and asked him to begin the project there.
Although hesitant at first, Uematsu agreed to join Sekito and Fukui in forming the rock band The Black Mages ; Sekito served as the group's guitarist.

Uematsu and also
Uematsu was also initially going to create the theme song for Final Fantasy XIII ( 2010 ).
Uematsu also works closely with Sakaguchi's development studio Mistwalker, and has composed the games in the Blue Dragon series, Lost Odyssey ( 2007 ), and Away Shuffle Dungeon ( 2008 ); he was also the composer of the cancelled game Cry On.
He is best known for his work on Final Fantasy XI ( with Nobuo Uematsu and Kumi Tanioka ), but has also composed music for Mega Man & Bass, Street Fighter Alpha, and Parasite Eve II.
Their co-composer, Nobuo Uematsu, also composed the music while co-composer, Masashi Hamauzu, arranged the music as well.
He was also selected to arrange half of Final Fantasy IVs Nintendo DS remake under the supervision of Uematsu, and composed the soundtrack to its 2008 sequel, Final Fantasy IV: The After Years.

Uematsu and created
In 2005, Uematsu and several members of The Black Mages created the score for the CGI film Final Fantasy VII Advent Children.
Uematsu created the main theme for the multi-composer game Super Smash Bros. Brawl in 2008.
He created four pieces for the 1996 video game Front Mission: Gun Hazard, which featured composers Nobuo Uematsu, Yasunori Mitsuda, and Masashi Hamauzu.
Series composer Nobuo Uematsu created two Chocobo themes for Final Fantasy VIII: " Mods de Chocobo " and " Odeka de Chocobo ".

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