Manami Matsumae (松前 真奈美, Matsumae Manami) is a Japanese video game music composer. She previously worked for Capcom in the 1980s, writing music for games such as Dynasty Wars, Mercs, Magic Sword, and the original Mega Man.
Manami Matsumae 松前 真奈美 | |
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Birth name | Manami Gotoh |
Also known as | Chanchacorin |
Born | (1964-12-25) December 25, 1964 (age 57) Tokyo, Japan |
Genres | Video game music |
Occupation(s) | Composer, arranger |
Instrument(s) | Piano |
Years active | 1987–present |
Labels | Brave Wave Productions[1] |
She previously worked for Capcom, where she worked on titles such as SonSon II, Dynasty Wars, U.N. Squadron, Mercs, Magic Sword, and Carrier Air Wing. She is best known, however, for composing the music for the original Mega Man, including its iconic "Game Start" jingle. Matsumae was known during her days at Capcom by her maiden name, Manami Gotoh (後藤 真奈美, Gotoh Manami), but was usually credited by her alias, Chanchacorin.[2]
Following her departure from Capcom in 1991, she became a freelance composer. The soundtracks she worked on afterwards include the Derby Stallion series, Game Boy titles developed by Sunsoft, and other games such as The Adventures of Lolo, Another Bible, Daffy Duck: The Marvin Missions, Jade Cocoon 2, and Dragon Quest Swords: The Masked Queen and the Tower of Mirrors. She also married fellow musician, Kimitaka Matsumae (originally part of Sega's S.S.T. Band), with whom she worked with on Othello World and Jade Cocoon 2.[citation needed]
Matsumae returned to the Mega Man series via Inti Creates, serving as a guest arranger for some of its album releases, and joining several other former Mega Man composers in creating the Robot Master themes for Mega Man 10. In 2014, she joined the Tokyo based label Brave Wave.[3] The label aims to help connect composers with international companies, which is how she contributed music to Shovel Knight.[3][4]
In July 2015, it was announced that Matsumae would be working on her first original solo album, in addition to a tribute album featuring arrangements by her.[5][6] The album, titled Three Movements, was released in December 2017.[7]
Year | Title | Co-worker(s) |
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1987 | Ide Yosuke Meijin no Jissen Mahjong[8] | Harumi Fujita |
Mega Man | ||
1988 | F1 Dream | |
Mega Man 2 | Takashi Tateishi | |
1943 Kai: Midway Kaisen | several others | |
1989 | Final Fight | |
SonSon II | ||
Dynasty Wars | ||
U.N. Squadron | ||
1990 | Mercs | |
Magic Sword: Heroic Fantasy | ||
Carrier Air Wing | ||
1991 | Capcom no Quiz: Tonosama no Yabou | |
Derby Stallion: Best Race | ||
1992 | Batman: Return of the Joker | |
Sanrio Cup: Pon Pon Volley | ||
Derby Stallion Zengokuban | ||
Trip World | ||
Best Play Pro Yakyuu Special | ||
Looney Tunes | ||
Honō no Dōkyūji: Dodge Danpei | Hiroshi Tsukamoto | |
Othello World | Kimitaka Matsumae | |
Esper Dream 2 | Shigemasa Matsuo | |
1993 | Honō no Dōkyūji: Dodge Danpei 2 | Hiroshi Tsukamoto |
Vegas Stakes | Kimitaka Matsumae | |
1994 | Adventures of Lolo | |
Derby Stallion II | ||
Tenchi o Kurau | ||
Daffy Duck: The Marvin Missions | ||
1995 | Another Bible | |
Derby Stallion III | ||
1996 | Derby Stallion '96 | |
G.O.D: Mezameyo to Yobu Koe ga Kikoe | Kimitaka Matsumae, Yuuichi Matsuzaki | |
Derby Stallion | ||
1998 | Pilot Kids | |
Derby Stallion '98 | ||
1999 | Derby Stallion '99 | |
Fun! Fun! Pingu | ||
2001 | Jade Cocoon 2 | Kimitaka Matsumae |
2002 | Best Play Pro Yakyuu | |
Derby Stallion Advance | ||
2006 | Derby Stallion P | |
2007 | Dragon Quest Swords | |
2010 | Mega Man 10 | several others |
2014 | Shovel Knight | Jake Kaufman |
Rainblocks[9] | ||
2015 | Target Acquired[10] | |
2016 | Flat Kingdom[11] | |
Mighty No. 9[12] | several others | |
2017 | Starr Mazer[13] | |
2020 | Derby Stallion[14] | |
2021 | Battle Axe[15] | |
2023 | 9 Years of Shadows | Michiru Yamane, Norihiko Hibino[16] |
TBA | Heart Forth, Alicia | Jonathan Geer, Alonso Martin[17] |
Time x Drifter | CobaltBW, Philip Walker[18] |
Authority control ![]() |
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