Masa Fukuda
Masafumi “Masa” Fukuda, an American songwriter, music arranger, and choir director, is the director and founder of One Voice Children’s Choir. He was born in Takatsuki, Osaka, Japan.
He was a music prodigy from an early age, having composed his first piano song, “Lonely Winter,” at the age of four. Attracted to the record player and piano in his family home, Fukuda said, “Ever since I can remember, I was attracted to anything that makes [a] sound.” At eight years of age, he enrolled in the Yamaha Music School, which The Salt Lake Tribune called a “challenging and exclusive” school that provided him a “college-level education” in musical composition and taught him how to collaborate with musical ensembles. He learned “theory, composition, arrangement, keyboard, ensemble, sight-reading, productions and recording.” By the age of 12, he was more than certain that he wanted to be a music producer.
In 1992, as a sophomore in high school, he participated in a student exchange program at the Meridian school, a private school in Provo, Utah. There he met Brigham Young University (BYU) professors whose strong teaching skills impressed him and encouraged him to attend BYU. He graduated from Meridian High School in 1995, and before attending BYU, he served a two-year full-time mission in Hiroshima, Japan, for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
While a student at BYU, he won a contest for nearby composers to write music for sale as soundtracks during the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, Utah. Back in 2001, he and Gael Shults asked 1,621 students from 69 elementary schools in the Alpine School District, Nebo School District, and Provo School District, to help create “Light Up the Land,” a commemorative CD of the Olympics. He sent the song to the organizers, and his song was selected among other songs for the Olympic CD and received two Pearl Awards.
Some of those students performed as the 2002 Winter Olympic Children’s Choir and Fukuda volunteered to train them. Some of the students, who were also performers in the “Children of Light” production for the opening and closing ceremonies, were volunteered to help train. After the Olympics, 25 students wanted to continue singing together. By September 2003, the group grew to 130 members. He and Shults served as the choir’s co-directors. At that time the group was called Studio A Children’s Choir. To keep working with the children, Fukuda obtained help from supportive parents to establish the choir as a non-profit organization with an advisory board, and in the summer of 2005, the group was named One Voice Children’s Choir.
Fukuda graduated from Brigham Young University in 2002. For a few years after he received a music degree, he served as an arranger of scripture videos for corporations. Also in 2002, he collaborated with songwriter Jeannine Lasky and together they wrote songs for The Power Within, an album that featured themes of “love, courage, hope, faith and living together in peace.” More than 1,600 children from Utah performed the songs with Paul Engemann, Alex Boyé, and other singers. Per Wikipedia, “Fukuda was inspired to work on the project after listening to the band Alabama’s song “Angels Among Us.” He later told Deseret News that he wished that there were “more songs that are uplifting yet not necessarily religious.” In 2005, a song that he co-wrote with Jeannine Lasky, “His Endless Love,” received a Pearl Award in the Holiday Recording category.
Masa Fukuda currently lives in Salt Lake City, Utah. In 2015, he married Catherine Alyssa Eatman Fukuda. Has produced or arranged for David Archuleta of the American Idol (Season 7), Justin Williams (Season 8), Jarrett Burns (X-Factor, 2011), and Alejandro Melecio (Latin Idol, 2012.). He is also the winner of the John Lennon Music Award, presented by Yoko Ono and George Martin of the Beatles.
Follow Masa Fukuda
Recent Posts
Donald Clark Osmond Dons Coat of Many Colors to Perform Wedding Ceremony for His Friends
Donald Clark Osmond (Donny), the world-renowned singer who in the 1990's starred in the title role on stage in the musical and on screen in the 1999 movie version of the musical, Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat, was asked to preside at the wedding of his...
Mat and Savanna Shaw, the Viral Father-Daughter Duo from Kaysville, Utah, to Release Their Debut Album
Eight months ago, as the world moved into lock-down mode due to the COVID-19 pandemic, then-15-year-old Savanna Shaw from Kaysville, Utah, found herself at home with her family and no physical contact with her school friends. Before the pandemic, Savanna had joined...
Teeroy Tyobee and Allie Gardner Release Powerful New Song “Different People”
Teeroy Tyobee (his stage name is TeeRoy) is a 29-year-old singer-songwriter from the Tiv Nation of Benue State in Nigeria. Before the COVID-19 pandemic he collaborated with recording artist and singer-songwriter, Allie Gardner, to create a powerful new song called...
Heather Parker’s New Album “Shine” Celebrates Diversity in Faiths and Cultures
With the many genres of music that are available to listen to, it can still often become a challenge to find music that is not only wholesome, but also spiritually uplifting and edifying. Even though a song may have a good beat, the rhythm and the beat are only a...
The Tabernacle Choir Celebrates 110th Anniversary of Their First Recording and Releases New Star Wars Music Video
More than a century ago - in fact, 110 years ago - on 1 September 1910 - The Tabernacle Choir at Temple Square (then known as the Mormon Tabernacle Choir) completed its first recording in the Salt Lake Tabernacle. Since then, the Church News reports that the Choir...
15-Year-Old Latter-day Saint Country Singer, Kenadi Dodds, Performs on the “America’s Got Talent” Stage
Ever since 2015, when now 15-year-old Kenadi Dodds, a Latter-day Saint country singer from Logan, Utah, saw Shania Twain from the front row at Vivint Arena in Salt Lake City, Utah, she has envisioned becoming a country star. She has had a few opportunities to help...