is a Japanese video game music composer and musician, who worked at Sega from 1989 to 1996 and contributed to games such as OutRunners and the Virtua Fighter series. After leaving in 1996, he joined Dream Factory and composed for Tobal 2 and Ehrgeiz. He founded the music production company Brainstorm Co. Ltd. in 1999, where he has most notably worked on the Lumines series and Rodea the Sky Soldier.
Biography
Nakamura was raised in a household that actively listened to music. During elementary school, he recorded songs from the radio and make his own mix tapes. After becoming a middle school student, he started to play the guitar, being inspired by artists such as Toto and Van Halen. During his high school years he got into jazz artists such as Keith Jarrett, Chick Corea, and Sadao Watanabe. He started a T-Square cover band with friends at college; as he was studying business, he did not get any musical education, but still wanted to pursue a career in music. He worked part-time jobs to raise money for music equipment, purchasing a Roland MC-300 sequencer. This led to him applying as a composer for game companies. Along with Takenobu Mitsuyoshi and Hiroshi Kawaguchi, Nakamura composed for OutRunners, which he found exciting due to it being a sequel to the popular OutRun, as well as being able to compose entirely using sampled instruments on the MultiPCM chip. Shortly after, he composed for Virtua Fighter. Although there was pressure at the company for the game to surpass Street Fighter II, he did not take much inspiration from its music, and found it challenging to output good sound from the cabinet speakers. After leaving Dream Factory in 1999, he founded the music production company Brainstorm Co. Ltd. One of the first projects he worked on after becoming independent was Kengo: Master of Bushido. With programmer and additional composer Katsumi Yokota fearing that the soundtrack would lack variety beyond techno and dance music, Nakamura constructed a rich variety of songs based on his understanding of the game's design, and considers his work to resemble ambient music. Nakamura primarily used Reason and Ableton Live software to compose the songs, finding the latter particularly suited for its interactive music.
Nakamura composed for the game Rodea the Sky Soldier, which was developed between 2010 and 2011 by Yuji Naka's company Prope, but not released until 2015. Naka initially envisioned the soundtrack to have an orchestral sound, but after Nakamura played a prototype he felt that an acoustic guitar accompaniment would fit well with the concept of dashing in the sky. He split his compositional style for cutscenes and gameplay, as the game features a romantic story.
