Yuu Miyake

Yuu Miyake (三宅 優) is a Japanese composer and sound engineer who formerly worked at Bandai Namco Entertainment. His most known work surfaced with Katamari Damacy soundtracks, on which he served as a sound director. Other notable works include various tracks in the Tekken and Ridge Racer series.

Biography
As a child, Miyake attended his mother's Electone classes. However, he could not adapt to the pieces he was given to play. He also listened to anime themes, disco and Yellow Magic Orchestra. He later aspired to have a career in illustration, frequently producing drawings. His interest in video game music developed after the release of Haruomi Hosono's Video Game Music, an album featuring music from Namco games he had already enjoyed. He started creating music aged 14, using a PC-88.

Prior to joining Namco, Miyake was a university student specializing in management information. After joining in 1997, his first game with the company was Tekken 3. This led to him working on subsequent titles in the franchise, including Tekken Tag Tournament and Tekken 4. He considers his work on these games to be his "specialty".

In 2000, Miyake worked with Namco director Keita Takahashi on a video project called Texas 2000. Despite being employed at Namco at the time, Miyake was given freedom to provide freelance work spanning various areas, including composition, programming and recording. He composed for promotional videos and commercials, and also provided additional sound design and programming for Mondo Grosso's songs "Everything Needs Love" and "Shinin'", both of which appear on his album Next Wave. He also participated in Hiroshi Okubo's doujin circle nanosounds, contributing tracks to multiple albums between 2000 and 2004.

Takahashi was so impressed with his work on Texas 2000 that he eventually gave him full responsibility as sound director on the 2004 release Katamari Damacy. He was given creative freedom, and considers the sound design and music to have been a major aspect of the game's success. In addition to covering a wide range of genres, he aimed to write catchy melodies for the game, feeling that video game music since the second half of the 90s had become unmemorable. He also served as the sound director for future titles in the series, and composed for Takahashi's Noby Noby Boy in 2009.

In 2011, he left Bandai Namco and established Miyakeyuu Studio, feeling that he would not grow any further as a musician at the company. He has continued to contribute tracks to further Bandai Namco games, and has also worked on games by other companies, including Super Monkey Ball: Banana Splitz and Gunslinger Stratos. He also started a side project with former Bandai Namco co-worker Yoshihito Yano, named Mikanz. Miyake attended MAGFest 13 in January 2015, holding a QA conference and performing various Katamari Damacy series songs under his DJ handle of "eutron". Yano also attended the event.

Outside of his work in the video game industry, he has served as a part-time lecturer at Tokyo Polytechnic University since 2014.