Who Composes The Night Flower Anime Soundtrack?

2025-08-27 11:20:59
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3 Answers

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Okay, so here’s a quick, practical route I use when a title like 'Night Flower' doesn’t show up in the big databases. First, check the streaming service’s episode page (if it’s on Crunchyroll, Netflix, or the like) — they sometimes list staff including music. Second, look for an OST album on YouTube or Spotify; album descriptions often include composer credits. Third, search Japanese keywords: try 'Night Flower 音楽' or 'Night Flower 作曲' — that tends to surface Japanese-language pages with the composer’s name.

From experience, if none of those yield results, the project could be an indie short, a fan work, or a song used in a non-japanese title. In indie cases the composer might be credited under a personal name or a circle/label (which you can track on Bandcamp/Booth). If you want a faster ID, drop the exact release year, a production studio name, or a screenshot of the credits and I’ll chase it down. I love these little detective hunts — sometimes the composer turns out to be a rising artist whose other tracks are a goldmine.
2025-08-30 00:29:02
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Hannah
Hannah
Favorite read: Night-Blooming
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If you mean the anime actually titled 'Night Flower', I don’t have a clear credit for that name in major databases so I’d ask for the original Japanese title or a screenshot of the ending credits. The composer is almost always shown in the credits as 作曲 or 音楽, and OST releases will list the composer and arranger. My go-to verification steps: check the end credits, search MyAnimeList/AniDB/VGMdb, and look up the OST on Discogs or Spotify. If it’s an indie or short, try Bandcamp or the director’s official page. If you paste the Japanese title or an image of the credits, I’ll help identify the composer and point you to the soundtrack release or streaming link.
2025-09-01 17:00:05
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Olivia
Olivia
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I’ve dug around a bit because 'Night Flower' isn’t jumping out at me as a mainstream anime title, and that makes the composer credit a little fuzzy without extra context. If you’re talking about an officially released anime named 'Night Flower', the quickest way I’d verify the composer is to check the end credits of an episode or film — that’s where the composer (音楽 or 作曲) is usually listed. If you don’t have the episode handy, official soundtrack (OST) releases on stores like CDJapan, VGMdb, or Discogs will list the composer and arranger on the product page.

If those routes don’t help, try searching MyAnimeList or AniDB with any alternate or Japanese title you might have. Smaller or indie projects sometimes list music credits under the production company or on the official website. Labels like Lantis, FlyingDog, or Sony Music often distribute soundtrack info if a composer is well-known. If it’s a short film or a festival piece, the composer might be a lesser-known freelance musician — in that case Bandcamp, SoundCloud, or the director’s social feeds often point to the artist.

If you want, send me the screenshot of the credits or the Japanese title and I’ll parse it for you. From what I’ve seen, many folks mix up literal English translations with official titles, so once we nail down the exact title I can usually find the credited composer within minutes.
2025-09-02 04:45:43
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