MUSICIAN

Toshio Masuda

1959 - Today

Photo of Toshio Masuda

Icon of person Toshio Masuda

Toshio Masuda (増田 俊郎, Masuda Toshio; born October 28, 1959) is a Japanese composer. He has composed and synthesized scores for several Japanese television shows and animated series. Masuda is perhaps best known as the composer of the 2002 hit anime series Naruto where he combined traditional instruments like the shamisen and shakuhachi together with guitar, drums, bass, piano and other keyboard instruments along with chanting. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Toshio Masuda is the 1,829th most popular musician (up from 1,967th in 2019), the 1,649th most popular biography from Japan (down from 1,590th in 2019) and the 23rd most popular Japanese Musician.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Toshio Masuda by language

Loading...

Among MUSICIANS

Among musicians, Toshio Masuda ranks 1,829 out of 3,175Before him are George Gruntz, Bill Black, Tadd Dameron, Tobias Sammet, Christopher Franke, and Jimmy Garrison. After him are Utada Hikaru, Bobby Hutcherson, Pino Palladino, Bootsy Collins, LiSA, and Percy Heath.

Most Popular Musicians in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1959, Toshio Masuda ranks 392Before him are Beth Broderick, Heather Oakes, Mats Näslund, Rick Carlisle, David Frankel, and Abdullah bin Khalifa Al Thani. After him are Erwin Olaf, Roberto Fiore, Gelindo Bordin, Glenn Morshower, Daniel Goldhagen, and Raf.

Others Born in 1959

Go to all Rankings

In Japan

Among people born in Japan, Toshio Masuda ranks 1,649 out of 6,245Before him are Ai Iijima (1972), Tsuru Morimoto (1970), Shuntaro Furukawa (1972), Takao Sakurai (1941), Kunio Hatoyama (1948), and Takahiro Sakurai (1974). After him are Seiji Ueda (1952), Yuji Horii (1954), LiSA (1987), Nikka Costa (1972), Kazumasa Shimizu (1976), and Ryota Takahashi (1986).

Among MUSICIANS In Japan

Among musicians born in Japan, Toshio Masuda ranks 23Before him are Masaharu Fukuyama (1969), Hyde (1969), Miyavi (1981), Nobuko Imai (1943), Yoko Shimomura (1967), and Nigo (1970). After him are LiSA (1987), Takanori Nishikawa (1970), Hirokazu Tanaka (1957), Ringo Sheena (1978), Tomoyasu Hotei (1962), and Keiko Matsui (1961).