Who Composed The Orange Series Soundtrack And Which Songs?

2025-11-05 16:29:39 204

5 Answers

Lila
Lila
2025-11-06 18:33:34
I'm the kind of person who pays attention to music credits, so I noticed the composer for the anime 'Orange' is Hiroaki Tsutsumi. The soundtrack is built from his small, deliberate motifs—pianos, discreet string arrangements, and ambient washes—that help sell the show's wistful tone. The official soundtrack pairs these instrumentals with the show’s theme singles: the opening track 'Hikari' and the closing track 'Kimi no Egao'.

When you explore the OST you’ll find lots of short cues titled after characters and moments — things like 'Main Theme', 'Naho's Theme', 'Suwa's Theme', and other emotionally descriptive names — which is handy if you want the exact music from particular episodes. I often use those tracks to set a contemplative mood while cleaning or cooking; they’re quietly powerful without being intrusive, which I appreciate.
Nolan
Nolan
2025-11-07 22:21:27
I tend to keep soundtrack facts in my head, and for 'Orange' the credited composer for the series score is Hiroaki Tsutsumi. His music shapes the anime’s emotional landscape with restrained piano and evocative string passages. In addition to his instrumental cues, the series features two noticeable vocal themes: the opening song 'Hikari' and the ending song 'Kimi no Egao'.

The OST release collects those themes plus many compact scene cues—titles you might see are oriented around characters and moments, like 'Main Theme', 'Memory', and 'Time Travel'—so it’s a compact package for replaying the show’s atmosphere. I often put the soundtrack on when I want something nostalgic but not overwhelming; it still gives me that little ache in a good way.
Xenia
Xenia
2025-11-09 17:53:31
I dug back through my old playlists to double-check, and the name that keeps popping up for the soundtrack is Hiroaki Tsutsumi — he’s credited with composing the series’ score. His approach gives 'Orange' its tender emotional backbone: sparse piano, subtle strings, and those little motifs that attach to memories and regret in the story.

The soundtrack release pairs those instrumentals with the anime’s theme songs. The two main vocal tracks tied to the show are the opening, 'Hikari', and the ending, 'Kimi no Egao'. Beyond those, the OST has many short cues often named after scenes or characters (for example, tracks that sound like 'Main Theme', 'Naho's Theme' or 'Time Travel'), which is typical for anime soundtracks that want to give listeners the exact moods from particular scenes. I find revisiting them feels like flipping through the story’s photo album, and they work great on repeat during rainy afternoons.
Annabelle
Annabelle
2025-11-09 23:51:46
I've got a soft spot for the score — Hiroaki Tsutsumi is the composer behind the anime 'Orange's soundtrack. He created the instrumental pieces that underscore the emotional beats: gentle piano, brief melancholic string swells, and minimalist ambient textures. The OST includes those background tracks as well as the two vocal themes: the opening 'Hikari' and the ending 'Kimi no Egao'.

A lot of the tracks are short, scene-focused cues, with names that echo characters and moments, so if you're searching the OST expect many small, mood-driven pieces rather than long symphonic suites. Personally I replay the piano-led cues when I'm reflecting on the series; they always catch that bittersweet feeling perfectly.
Emma
Emma
2025-11-11 10:33:31
I can still hum a few of the softer pieces from the show — the soundtrack's overall feel stuck with me. The primary composer credited for the anime 'Orange' is Hiroaki Tsutsumi, who handled the score that underpins the series' bittersweet, nostalgic vibe. His work there favors gentle piano lines, quiet strings, and those fragile pads that make the time-travel and regret moments land emotionally.

On the official soundtrack you'll find a mix of character-centric cues and scene cues — think tracks often labeled like 'Main Theme', 'Naho's Theme', 'Suwa's Theme', 'Friendship', 'Memory', and 'Time Travel' — alongside the show's vocal themes: the opening song 'Hikari' and the ending song 'Kimi no Egao'. The OST album blends Tsutsumi's instrumental pieces with those theme singles, so if you want the breathing-room background music plus the vocal bookends, that release covers both. I always reach for the piano tracks when I need something mellow to study to; they still feel warm to me.
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