Evan Call
Evan Call (born June 29, 1988) is an American composer, arranger, and musician based in Japan, renowned for his orchestral film scores, particularly in anime, including the acclaimed series Violet Evergarden (2018) and Frieren: Beyond Journey's End (2023).[1][2][3] Call grew up in Lincoln, California, where he developed an interest in music; he later pursued formal education in film scoring at Berklee College of Music.[1] After graduating, he relocated to Japan in 2012 to begin his professional career, initially focusing on image music for television and film while expanding into vocal song arrangements, lyrics, and performances.[2] Represented by the Miracle Bus agency, Call has contributed to a wide array of projects, blending Western orchestral elements with anime storytelling to create emotionally resonant soundscapes.[2][1] His breakthrough came with Violet Evergarden, where his majestic and sentimental compositions anchored the series' themes of loss and redemption, earning widespread praise for tracks like the main theme.[2][4] Subsequent highlights include the theatrical film Josee, the Tiger and the Fish (2020), the romantic fantasy My Happy Marriage (2023), and the epic adventure Frieren: Beyond Journey's End, for which he composed music evoking the "voice of the world" to enhance its themes of time and memory.[2][5][6] In 2025, Call received the Best Sound & Performance award at the Tokyo Anime Award Festival (TAAF) for his work on Frieren: Beyond Journey's End and Sengoku Youko.[5] He continues to be active, with recent projects including the Pokémon short Dragonite and the Mailman (2025), Jigoku Sensei Nube (2025), and Necronomico and the Cosmic Horror Show (2025), as well as scoring the second season of Frieren: Beyond Journey's End (2026).[7][8][9][10]Biography
Early life
Evan Call was born on June 29, 1988, in Lincoln, California, United States.[1] As a child, Call encountered Japanese anime through series like Pokémon (seasons 1 through The Johto Journeys) and Digimon, introduced by a friend, which ignited his fascination with the medium. During his teenage years, this interest deepened with shows like Samurai 7 (2004), which left a significant impression on him due to its storytelling and music.[11][12] Call's musical journey began around age 13 or 14, when he took a year of bluegrass guitar lessons using an old guitar from his mother, marking his first formal engagement with music despite limited prior interest. He soon transitioned to self-taught composition, acquiring an inexpensive keyboard and software to experiment with orchestral pieces, alongside playing guitar and singing in his school choir. These early, independent pursuits laid the foundation for his compositional style, blending personal experimentation with influences from genres like power metal and folk music.[11][13]Education
Evan Call enrolled at the Berklee College of Music in Boston after completing two years at a community college, majoring in film scoring for his final two years of undergraduate studies.[11] Inspired by anime from his early years, he pursued this path to develop skills in composing music for visual media.[11] His coursework emphasized orchestration through attendance at Boston Pops and Symphony Orchestra performances, film music theory focused on translating emotions from video into sound, and composition techniques that integrated jazz and orchestral elements.[14] As part of his training, Call observed legendary composer John Williams conducting, which influenced his approach to large-scale arrangements.[14] He also gained practical experience by teaching English weekly to 15 international students, broadening his exposure to global musical perspectives.[14] Call graduated from Berklee in the early 2010s, marking the completion of his formal education in film scoring.[11]Relocation to Japan
Following his graduation from Berklee College of Music in 2012 with a degree in film scoring, Evan Call relocated to Japan to pursue opportunities in the anime and video game music industry, driven by a childhood fascination with Japanese animation such as Pokémon and Digimon.[15][16] His Berklee education equipped him with essential skills in orchestration and scoring that facilitated this transition.[17] Upon arrival, Call entered Japan on a three-month tourist visa, facing immediate pressure to secure music-related work or pivot to English teaching to extend his stay.[15][16] As an American composer in a predominantly Japanese industry, he encountered significant cultural and professional hurdles, including language barriers and the need to navigate a competitive, insular network where foreign talent was rare.[14] Call's entry into the Japanese music scene began through grassroots networking at informal events like otaku gatherings, where a chance introduction via a roommate's friend led to key connections.[15][16] He prepared and submitted demo recordings to showcase his abilities, which helped overcome initial skepticism and opened doors to early arranging roles for prominent vocalists, marking his gradual integration despite the visa uncertainties and cultural adjustments.[15]Professional career
Time with Elements Garden
Evan Call joined the music production group Elements Garden in 2012, serving as a composer and arranger until his departure on June 30, 2016.[18][1] His affiliation with the group began shortly after relocating to Japan on a tourist visa, which facilitated his entry into the professional music scene there.[14] During this period, Call contributed to several collaborative group projects, focusing on anime soundtracks that showcased Elements Garden's signature orchestral and dynamic styles. He played a key role in the background music for Symphogear G (2013) and Symphogear GX (2015), where his compositions helped drive the series' high-energy action sequences with symphonic elements.[3][19] Similarly, for Tokyo ESP (2014), Call handled music composition under the Elements Garden banner, incorporating influences from Latin jazz and funk to underscore the anime's intense fight scenes.[3][14] In 2016, he contributed arrangements and original tracks to Schwarzesmarken, blending electronic and orchestral motifs to fit the mecha drama's tense atmosphere.[20] Within Elements Garden's collaborative environment, Call experienced substantial growth in symphonic and anime-style composition, learning to craft cohesive background music and insert songs through teamwork with other members.[14] This phase allowed him to refine techniques for integrating diverse musical influences into narrative-driven scores, emphasizing orchestral depth while adapting to the fast-paced demands of anime production.[14]Miracle Bus era
In 2016, Evan Call left Elements Garden following the expiration of his contract, transitioning to work as an independent composer while continuing to contribute to the anime music industry.[13][11] The following year, in 2017, Call joined Miracle Bus, a Japanese music production agency, where he has maintained an ongoing role as a composer and arranger.[2][1] His affiliation with the agency provided a platform for broader creative endeavors beyond group-based production. This era represented a significant progression in Call's career, leveraging prior collaborative experience to pursue higher-profile assignments with greater autonomy in compositional decisions, including opportunities for more expansive and freely structured works.[11]Key collaborations
Evan Call's most pivotal professional partnership formed with sound director Yōta Tsuruoka at Kyoto Animation, beginning in the early 2010s when Tsuruoka introduced him to anime composition opportunities. Their initial collaboration on the 2014 series Tokyo ESP showcased Call's versatile style, blending action-driven cues with jazz and funk influences, which Tsuruoka praised for its originality and adaptability. This rapport led to repeated assignments, including the 2018 series Violet Evergarden under director Taichi Ishidate, where Tsuruoka granted Call significant creative latitude to develop orchestral themes that anchored the production's emotional core. Tsuruoka's endorsement of Call's distinctive approach—often joking that Call "doesn't listen" to overly prescriptive directions—fostered a dynamic where Call's input directly influenced scoring decisions, prioritizing narrative depth over conventional formulas.[14] The Tsuruoka-Call synergy extended to Kyoto Animation's Violet Evergarden film in 2020 and the 2023 multimedia project Hagureboshi no Uta, again directed by Ishidate, with Call composing an orchestral soundtrack performed in Hungary. These ongoing ties with Ishidate emphasized collaborative refinement of thematic motifs, such as leitmotifs evoking loss and growth, which shaped project selections toward introspective stories suited to Call's strengths. The partnership's impact rippled outward, positioning Call for breakthrough roles at other studios by demonstrating his reliability in elevating Kyoto's signature visual-emotional storytelling.[21][22] Expanding beyond Kyoto, Call partnered with Kinema Citrus on the 2023 romance series My Happy Marriage, where close coordination with the production team allowed him to infuse supernatural elements with intimate, piano-led arrangements, marking a shift toward genre-blending assignments. Similarly, his collaboration with Madhouse on Frieren: Beyond Journey's End (2023), involving producer Yuichiro Fukushi, highlighted world-building through expansive scores that balanced melancholy and adventure, a creative direction enabled by prior Kyoto successes that broadened his appeal to fantasy adaptations. This partnership continued into 2025 with Call scoring the second season of the series.[23][24] These alliances have steered Call toward high-impact projects emphasizing character-driven music, enhancing his selective approach to roles that align with personal artistic growth.Works
Anime series and films
Evan Call began composing for anime in 2013 with the television series Symphogear G, where he provided music as part of Elements Garden.[25] Over the subsequent years, he has created original soundtracks for more than 25 anime television series and original net animations (ONAs), often handling theme song arrangements and compositions in addition to core scoring.[3] His work spans genres from fantasy and romance to action and supernatural, with notable series including Violet Evergarden (2018), where he composed the soundtrack, arranged the opening and ending themes, and created insert songs like "The Songstress Aria" to underscore themes of loss and redemption. Similarly, for Frieren: Beyond Journey's End (2023), Call's orchestral score captures the melancholic journey of immortality and memory, including arrangements for ending themes and a special ending composition. In 2023's My Happy Marriage, his music blends traditional Japanese elements with Western orchestration to evoke supernatural romance, a style continued in the 2025 second season with tracks like "The Awakening of Miyo Saimori." Other significant television contributions include Muv-Luv Alternative (2021–2022), featuring intense mecha battle cues and insert song "Mebae"; Appare-Ranman! (2020), with adventurous steampunk-inspired scores; and Sengoku Youko (2024), emphasizing historical fantasy action.[3] A chronological overview of his anime television series and ONA compositions includes:- Symphogear G (TV, 2013): Music.[25]
- Kamigami no Asobi (TV, 2014): Music.[25]
- Tokyo ESP (TV, 2014): Music.[25]
- The Disappearance of Nagato Yuki-chan (TV, 2015): Theme song arrangement (ED).[3]
- Dance with Devils (TV, 2015): Music.[25]
- Symphogear GX (TV, 2015): Music.[25]
- Big Order (OVA/TV, 2015–2016): Music.[25]
- Schwarzesmarken (TV, 2016): Music, theme song arrangement and composition (ED).[25]
- Jikan no Shihaisha (Chronos Ruler) (TV, 2017): Music.[3]
- Hakumei to Mikochi (TV, 2018): Music.[25]
- Violet Evergarden (TV, 2018): Music, theme song arrangement (OP, ED 2), theme song composition (ED 2), insert song arrangement/composition/lyrics.[25]
- Mayonaka no Occult Koumuin (Midnight Occult Civil Servants) (TV/OVA, 2019): Music.[25]
- Kono Yo no Hate de Koi wo Utau Shoujo YU-NO (TV, 2019): Music.[25]
- Appare-Ranman! (TV, 2020): Music.[25]
- Sankaku Mado no Sotogawa wa Yoru (TV, 2021): Music.[25]
- Muv-Luv Alternative (TV seasons 1–2, 2021–2022): Music, insert song arrangement/composition ("Mebae").[25]
- Watashi no Shiawase na Kekkon (My Happy Marriage) (TV, 2023): Music.[25]
- Sousou no Frieren (Frieren: Beyond Journey's End) (TV season 1, 2023): Music, theme song arrangement/composition (ED).[25]
- Sousou no Frieren ●● no Mahou (ONA, 2023): Music.[25]
- Sengoku Youko (TV, 2024): Music.[25]
- Sousou no Frieren (TV season 2, 2026): Music.[3]
- Watashi no Shiawase na Kekkon 2nd Season (My Happy Marriage season 2) (TV, 2025): Music.[26]
- Jigoku Sensei Nube 2025 (Hell Teacher: Jigoku Sensei Nube) (TV, 2025): Music.[25]
- Necronomico no Cosmic Horror Show (TV, 2025): Music.[25]
- Kairyuu to Yuubinyasan (ONA, 2025): Music.[25]
- Mouretsu Pirates: Abyss of Hyperspace (Movie, 2014): Music.[25]
- Violet Evergarden Gaiden: Eternity and the Auto Memory Doll (Movie, 2019): Music.[25]
- Josee to Tora to Sakana-tachi (Josee, the Tiger and the Fish) (Movie, 2020): Music, theme song composition/lyrics (OP).[25]
- Violet Evergarden: The Movie (Movie, 2020): Music.[25]
- Kin no Kuni, Mizu no Kuni (Gold Kingdom and Water Kingdom) (Movie, 2023): Music.[25]