Haruomi Hosono - Composition Work

Composition Work

  • Imokin Trio (イモ欽トリオ?):
High School Lullaby (1981)
Teardrop Tanteidan (ティアドロップ探偵団?) (1982)
Teenage Eagles (1983)
  • Apogee & Perigee (Jun Togawa, Yuji Miyake and other artists):
Getsusekai Ryokou (月世界旅行?) (1984, Alfa)
Shinkuu Kiss (真空キッス?) (1984, Alfa)
  • Seiko Matsuda:
Tegoku no Kiss/Wagamama na Kataomoi (天国のキッス/わがままな片想い?) (1983)
Glass no Ringo (ガラスの林檎?) (1983)
Pink no Mozart (ピンクのモーツァルト?) (1984)
  • Akina Nakamori: Kinku (禁区?) (1983)
  • Yoshie Kashiwabara: Shiawase Ondo (しあわせ音頭?) (1982)
  • Shin'ichi Mori:
New York Monogatari (紐育物語?) (1983)
Whiskey Ira no Machi de (ウイスキー色の街で?)
  • Miki Fujimura:
仏蘭西映画
夢・恋・人 (1983)
妖星傅
春 Mon Amour
  • Kumiko Yamashita: 赤道小町ドキッ (1982)
  • Narumi Yasuda: Kaze no Tani no Nausicaä (風の谷のナウシカ, Kaze no Tani no Naushika?, Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind) (image song for the film) (1984)
  • Chisato Moritaka: Miracle Light (ミラクルライト?) (1997)
  • Mitsuko Horie: Kiteretsu Daihyakka no Uta (キテレツ大百科のうた?) (1987, Kiteretsu Daihyakka 90 minute special opening theme)
  • Mika Matsubara: Paradise Beach (Sophie's Theme) (パラダイス ビーチ(ソフィーのテーマ), Paradaisu Biichi (Sofii no Teema)?)
  • Starbow: Heartbreak Taiyōzoku (ハートブレイク太陽族?) (1982)
  • Kuniko Yamada: Tetsugaku Shiyō (哲学しよう?)
  • Kawakamisan to Nagashimasan: きたかチョーさんまってたドン(1983)
  • Masatō Ibu: Datte, Hormone Love (だって、ホルモンラブ?)
  • Jun Togawa: 玉姫様 (1984)
  • "NHK News Today" opening theme (1988, NHK TV)
  • Chappie: Tanabata no Yoru, Kimi ni Aitai (七夕の夜、君に逢いたい?) (1999)

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Famous quotes containing the words composition and/or work:

    Since body and soul are radically different from one another and belong to different worlds, the destruction of the body cannot mean the destruction of the soul, any more than a musical composition can be destroyed when the instrument is destroyed.
    —Oscar Cullman. Immortality of the Soul or Resurrection of the Dead? The Witness of the New Testament, ch. 1, Epworth Press (1958)

    The form of act or thought mattered nothing. The hymns of David, the plays of Shakespeare, the metaphysics of Descartes, the crimes of Borgia, the virtues of Antonine, the atheism of yesterday and the materialism of to-day, were all emanation of divine thought, doing their appointed work. It was the duty of the church to deal with them all, not as though they existed through a power hostile to the deity, but as instruments of the deity to work out his unrevealed ends.
    Henry Brooks Adams (1838–1918)