Hip Tanaka
The sound of Nintendo
Hirokazu 'Hip' Tanaka composed definitive Nintendo soundtracks—Metroid, Kid Icarus, Earthbound—and pioneered the use of the Famicom's limited sound hardware.
Overview
Hirokazu Tanaka joined Nintendo in 1980, initially designing arcade sound hardware before becoming one of gaming’s most distinctive composers. His work spans the atmospheric isolation of Metroid, the whimsy of Kid Icarus, and the surreal soundscapes of Earthbound. Tanaka approached the Famicom’s limitations as creative constraints, finding beauty in the chip’s peculiar voice.
Fast facts
- Background: studied electronics engineering before joining Nintendo.
- Hardware work: designed sound hardware for Game Boy and contributed to Famicom development.
- Style: favoured electronic and ambient textures over traditional melodies.
- Later career: founded Creatures Inc. and produced Pokémon music.
Key soundtracks
| Game | Year | Platform | Notable for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Metroid | 1986 | NES | Atmospheric, alien soundscape |
| Kid Icarus | 1986 | NES | Upbeat, adventurous themes |
| Mother | 1989 | Famicom | Quirky, Beatles-influenced |
| Dr. Mario | 1990 | NES/GB | Catchy puzzle music |
| Earthbound | 1994 | SNES | Experimental, eclectic |
Technical approach
Tanaka treated the APU as an instrument in itself:
- Noise channel: used creatively for texture, not just drums.
- Silence: embraced quiet moments rare in 8-bit games.
- Unconventional structures: compositions that evolved rather than looped rigidly.