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J. A. Seazer

J. A. Seazer
寺原 孝明 / J・A・シーザー
Born
Takaaki Terahara

(1948-10-06) 6 October 1948 (age 76)
NationalityJapanese
Occupations
  • Composer
  • Theatre director
  • Lyricist
Years active1971-current
Websitehttps://banyuinryoku.wixsite.com/index


Takaaki Terahara (寺原 孝明, Terahara Takaaki), known professionally as Julius Arnest "J.A." Seazer (born 6 October 1948), is a Japanese film and theater music composer.[1] Seazer enjoyed popularity among students in Japan during the 1960s, and worked closely with director Shuji Terayama and his theater Tenjo Sajiki until Terayama's death (besides incidental music, he wrote a few full-fledged rock operas for Tenjo Sajiki, including Shintokumaru). He is a member of the theatrical company Experimental Laboratory of Theatre ◎ Universal Gravitation (演劇実験室◎万有引力, Engeki-Jikkenshitsu Ban'yū Inryoku), better known as just Ban'yū Inryoku. He gained more mainstream attention for his songs composed for the anime Revolutionary Girl Utena,[2] and has also composed the score to the animated film adaptation of Suehiro Maruo's manga Mr. Arashi's Amazing Freak Show (also known as Midori or Shojo-tsubaki).

  1. ^ Justin Simon (July–August 2008). "J.A. Caesar Kokkyou Junreika (Victor 1973).(GP: VINYL ARCHEOLOGY: EASTERN PROMISES: FIELD TESTING WITH JAPANESE PSYCH)". The Fader. Retrieved 9 January 2011. [dead link]
  2. ^ Green, Scott (25 May 2017). ""Revolution Girl Utena" Gets A Haunting New Look For Latest Album From Composer J. A. Seazer". Crunchyroll.

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جيه. إي. قيصر Arabic جيه. اى. سايزير ARZ J. A. Seazer German جی، آ، سیزر FA J. A. Seazer French J・A・シーザー Japanese J. A. 시저 Korean 寺原孝明 Chinese

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